“…Hellophytes (Phragmites australis, Alternanthera philoxeroides, Typha domingensis, Junus sp. ), ornamental plants (Ipomoea hederifolia, Aster amellus, Portulaca grandiflora, Zinnia angustifolia, Petunia grandiflora, Glandularia pulchella) and many ferns and herbs have been extensively used for dye removal. ,, Recently, aquatic plants such as Pistia stratiotes or Lemna minor have been used successfully in the elimination of carcinogenic azo red dye, although plants cannot be reused and at high concentrations suffer irreversible damage. , Some of these plants have been used in phytoreactors and constructed wetlands, obtaining interesting results in biotransformation, although the derived products were not always non/less toxic than untreated compounds. , Plant tissue cultures can be an alternative for the degradation of these compounds. They offer advantages like they lack chlorophyll and other plant pigments, reproducibility, homogeneity of the plant material, reduced problems of uptake and transport, easy manipulation and more quick results.…”