The edited book serves as a reference on indicators of environmental pollution and how to sustainably ascertain the effects of different pollutants on life forms. It addresses an improved technology for monitoring contaminants, especially in the Global South and beyond, where the level of technology available for sustainable management of environmental quality is limited.
Biomonitoring ecosystems’ health by using organisms to gather quantitative data on environmental quality is one of the most straightforward and affordable ways to check environmental quality. Since organisms may function as environmental sensors, their use in the direct measurement of environmental quality in the process of biomonitoring studies implicates the health status of various ecosystems. In this regard, microorganisms, higher and lower plants, invertebrates, and vertebrate animals are beneficial since they can detect pollution levels and pollutants in the environment.
This book is of interest and useful to toxicologists, water, soil, and air quality experts, practitioners, trainees, and trainers, biological sciences scientists, academicians, researchers, students (especially undergraduates and postgraduates), libraries, and other public knowledge repositories interested in novel and advanced practices in sustainable biomonitoring of environmental pollutants.
Table des matières
1. Overview and Perspectives of Biomonitoring in the Global South.- 2. Emerging pollutant from Urbanization and Industrialization in the Global South.- 3. Pollutants form Agricultural activities in the Global South.- 4. Population Growth and Environmental Pollution in the Global south.- 5. Natural Hazards as a source of Environmental Pollution in the Global South.- 6. Biomonitoring for Sustainable Development.- 7. Biomonitoring Tools, Techniques and Approaches For Environmental Assessments.- 8. Planktons as a sustainable biomonitoring tool of aquatic ecosystem.- 9. Seed plants as a sustainable biomonitoring tool for environmental pollutants.- 10. Epiphytes as a sustainable biomonitoring tool for environmental pollutants.- 11. Macrophytes as a sustainable biomonitoring tool sustainable of aquatic pollution.- 12. Fish as a Sustainable Biomonitoring Tool in Aquatic Environments.- 13. Suitability of Mammals Indigenous to the Global South As Bioindicator Species For Assessing Environmental Health.- 14. Reptiles As Environmental Sentinels: Exploring their Significance.- 15. Arthropods as a Sustainable Biomonitoring Tool for Environmental Pollution.- 16. Biomarkers for the detection of pollutants from the water environment.- 17. Molecular techniques and technologies in biomonitoring for environmental sustainability.- 18. Microorganisms in the Monitoring of Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecosystems: Applications, Challenges And Future Prospects.- 19. Sustainable Application of Genetic Ecotoxicological Techniques in Biomonitoring for Environmental Sustainability.- 20. Metabolic changes and Immunity suppression parameters as biomarkers of environmental.- pollutants.- 21. Application of micronucleus test in African toad as biomarker of genotoxic and cytotoxic assessment of contaminants in the African environment.- 22. Sustainable Application of Artificial Intelligence in Biomonitoring for Environmental Sustainability: Challenges and Prospects.- 23. Environmental Stewardship:Safeguarding Biodiversity in Protected Landscapes and Recreational Parks using Biosecurity.- 24. Bioindicators in Recreational Planning Development: Balancing Nature and Human Activities.
A propos de l’auteur
Dr. Sylvester Chibueze Izah is a lecturer at Bayelsa Medical University in Yenagoa, Nigeria, where he also serves as the Assistant Director of Academic Planning, Research, and Innovations. Dr. Izah is a licensed Environmental Health Specialist in Nigeria. He is a multidisciplinary academic with multifaceted abilities relevant to Sustainable Human-Environmental Health Interactions (covering air, soil, and water quality; toxicology; hygiene and sanitation; food science; waste management; biodiversity and their sustainability and risk assessment). He has an impressive track record of over 280 peer-reviewed publications, including journal articles, book chapters, and edited books. Dr. Izah has also collaborated on research projects with colleagues worldwide and actively contributes as an editorial and review board member for several esteemed journals.
Dr. Matthew Chidozie Ogwu is an Assistant Professor of Integrated Ecology and Sustainable Development at Appalachian State University, USA. He is an interdisciplinary academic with transdisciplinary skills and diverse convergence research interests (One Health and Eco Health) pertinent to the assessment of coupled human and natural as well as socio-ecological systems and has numerous awards, research grants, and scholarships to his name. Dr. Ogwu serves on the board of and as a reviewer for many peer-reviewed journals. He continues to volunteer his time and skills to promote sustainable development.
Dr. Hamidifar received his Ph.D. in Water Engineering from the UT (University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran). In January 2013, he was appointed as an Assistant Professor at Fasa University’s Department of Water Engineering in Fasa, Iran. He transferred to Shiraz University’s Water Engineering Department in September 2015, where he became an Associate Professor in August 2021. His research is situated in the field of hydro-environment, with a special focus on water resources management, stage-discharge relationships, flow-vegetation-pollutant interaction, overbank flow, morphodynamics, and flood modelling. He is the author or co-author of over 50 publications published in international refereed journals, as well as over 50 conference contributions. He has given invited/plenary lectures at a number of national and international conferences.