Indoor Plants: The Secret to Clean Indoor Air
Filed in: Green Living
By Kat Vaughan
Did you know the air in your home may be toxic? Thankfully, there are a host of indoor plants available to clean your air. In 1989, NASA identified a number of indoor plants effective at reducing toxins in the home, including benzene, formaldehyde, trichloroethylene, and carbon monoxide.
Did you know the air in your home may be toxic? Thankfully, there are a host of indoor plants available to clean your air. In 1989, NASA identified a number of indoor plants effective at reducing toxins in the home, including benzene, formaldehyde, trichloroethylene, and carbon monoxide.
- Benzene - Found in inks, oils, plastics, paints, detergents, synthetic fibers, etc.
- Formaldehyde - Found in plywood, grocery bags, waxed paper, fire retardants, etc.
- Trichloroethylene - Found in inks, varnishes, & adhesives
- Carbon monoxide - Found in unvented kerosene and gas heaters, leaking chimneys and furnaces, tobacco smoke, automobile exhaust from attached garage, gas stoves, & generators and other gasoline powered equipment.
Bamboo Palm (Chamaedorea seifritzii)
Chinese Evergreen (Algaonema modestmu)
English Ivy (Hedera helix)
Gerbera Daisy (Gerbera jamesonii)
Janet Craig (Dracaena)
Marginata (Dracaena marginata)
Mass Cane/ Corn Plant (Dracaena massangeana)
Mother-in-law's Tongue (Sansevieria laurentii)
Pot Mum (Chrysantheium morifolium)
Peace Lily (Spathuphyllum "Mauna Loa")
Go shopping, clean your air and live free!
|



