Discover the SciOpen Platform and Achieve Your Research Goals with Ease.
Search articles, authors, keywords, DOl and etc.
Fungi have many different roles in keeping the environment healthy. These roles aren’t often recognized, but they make fungi key to fixing today’s ecological problems. This review focuses on what fungi can do for environmental monitoring, bioremediation and ecological restoration work. Fungi have a remarkable metabolic versatility and ecological adaptability, which allows them to degrade complex organic contaminants and heavy metals, pharmaceutical waste, and even plastic. Symbiotic and mycorrhizal fungi are helpful for phytoremediation and soil regeneration. We use fungi for biomonitoring tools, fungal biosensors, and hybrid technologies. These technologies pair fungal systems with things like biochar adsorption and AI monitoring. They show even more clearly how fungi help with sustainable environmental care. Fungi have a remarkable ability to solve ecological problems. Their potential is huge, but people mostly ignore them. The reasons include limited molecular reference information, confusion about how to classify them, and problems with public acceptance. These issues are considerable barriers to using them on a large scale. Therefore, we can fix these problems by collecting more fungal species, building DNA reference libraries, and combining different technologies. Environmental chemists, taxonomists, and microbial environmentalists should work together across various fields. This will open up new ways to restore ecosystems and reduce pollution. Above all, seeing fungi as ecological partners we can’t do without is crucial. It helps make new and creative, easy to use on a large scale, flexible, and long-lasting solutions for a cleaner planet.

This is an open access article under the terms of the CreativeCommons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Comments on this article