Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 4 — Narrative / commentaryPeer-reviewed

Current status of pesticide effects on environment, human health and it's eco-friendly management as bioremediation: A comprehensive review.

Pathak VM, Verma VK, Rawat BS, Kaur B, Babu N, Sharma A, Dewali S, Yadav M, Kumari R, Singh S, Mohapatra A, Pandey V, Rana N, Cunill JM.

Front Microbiol · 2022

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Summary

This comprehensive review examines the current evidence on pesticide residues in agricultural and environmental systems, their documented health impacts on humans and non-target organisms, and emerging bioremediation and ecological management approaches. The authors synthesise knowledge across toxicology, soil microbiology, and environmental science to appraise both hazard severity and potential remediation pathways. The work appears positioned to inform sustainable pest management practice and policy by consolidating evidence on harms and eco-friendly alternatives.

UK applicability

Directly relevant to UK agriculture, where pesticide use remains widespread in cereals and horticulture despite regulatory restrictions. Findings on soil microbial impacts and remediation strategies may inform UK soil health policy and the Farm Sustainability Incentives schemes promoting integrated pest management.

Key measures

Pesticide residue persistence; soil microbial impacts; human exposure routes; bioremediation efficacy; environmental contamination levels

Outcomes reported

The study synthesised evidence on pesticide contamination pathways, documented effects on soil health and human health endpoints, and reviewed biological and ecological remediation approaches. It likely assessed the scope and severity of pesticide persistence in agricultural systems and evaluated mitigation strategies.

Theme
Farming systems, soils & land use
Subject
Pesticides, contaminants & food safety
Study type
Narrative Review
Study design
Comprehensive narrative review
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
Status
Published
Geography
Global
System type
Horticulture
DOI
10.3389/fmicb.2022.962619
Catalogue ID
NRmo9rin9c-0mw

Topic tags

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