Chemical stressors in agroecosystems. Toxicity of persistent organic pesticides to soil biota. Current-use pesticides: an overview. Nanopesticides. Inorganic anions: fertilizers versuspollutants. Agriculture in metal-polluted soils: plant uptake and toxicity. Metal toxicity on soilorganisms. Engineering nanoparticles: sources, transport and impacts on agricultural soils. Pharmaceuticals in soil: sources and occurrence. Pharmaceuticals in reclaimed wastewaterirrigation: plant uptake. Microplastics in soil: a real environmental hazard? In situbioremediation. Bacterial bioremediation strategies. Fungal bioremediation of agrochemicals. Genetically modified organisms in soil bioremediation. Phytoremediation in agroecosystems. Synthetic biology: a promising technology for in situ bioremediation. Biostimulation ofagricultural soils: nutrient addition. Vermicompost and its enzymatic bioremediation potential. Biochar: a partner in the fighting against soil contamination. Natural attenuation of contaminated soils. Biological methodologies for assessing and monitoring bioremediation. Microbial molecular techniques for assessing contaminated soil. Ecotoxicity testings using soilmeso - and macrofauna. In situ biomonitoring approaches. Microbial indicators: soil enzymeactivities. Urban agriculture: pollution monitoring tools for healthy vegetables.
Biography
Juan C. Sanchez-Hernandez is a professor in Environmental Toxicology and Animal Physiology at the University of Castilla-La Mancha (Spain). His research interests include the ecotoxicity of agrochemicals on non-target organisms and vermiremediation. He has published more than 70 peer-reviewed articles on these topics, and he is a frequent reviewer both for several of top journals in the field of environmental sciences as well as for a number of international research institutions.






