Louisiana farmers rely on herbicides, pesticides and fungicides to protect their crops against weeds, insects and diseases. Even though most farmers try to be good stewards of the environment, some of those chemicals inevitably end up in waterways, or elsewhere, instead of benefiting the plants. To address this problem, LSU Professor Cristina Sabliov is working on technologies for more targeted delivery of agrochemicals to crops, to prevent waste—a cost issue for farmers—while protecting plants, yields and the environment.
Sabliov develops nanoparticles that are smaller than the eye can see—about a thousand times smaller than the thickness of a human hair. These tiny delivery systems can attach to specific parts of a plant, such as the root or the leaves, and deposit a small but significant payload to be released either immediately or over time.
Most of Sabliov's work to-date has focused on soybeans, a major crop in Louisiana and around the world. She's received continuous support for her research from the Louisiana Soybean and Grain Research and Promotion Board and from the U.S. Department of Agriculture throughout her career.
"Louisiana soybean farmers see great value in supporting research that can generate solutions to challenges that are unique to our state," said Charles Cannatella, chairman of the Louisiana Soybean and Grain Research and Promotion Board and a farmer in Melville in St. Landry Parish where he grows soybeans, corn and sugarcane together with his family. "We are excited that Dr. Cristina Sabliov is doing just that. Louisiana soybeans thrive in large part due to our climate conditions, which also present unique challenges, like diseases and fungi that thrive in these same conditions."
Many Louisianans are surprised to learn that their home state produces more soybeans than rice. Soybeans rank fourth among Louisiana's top agricultural commodities, after forestry, poultry and sugarcane. At harvest, 80% of all soybeans become soybean meal, often used as livestock feed since it's high in protein. Most of that meal is fed to chickens, so the argument could be made that Sabliov's research supports not just one, but two, of the state's top agricultural industries.
Her most recent work turns a waste product from the paper industry called lignin into something useful as biodegradable "nanovehicles." Lignin is present in most plants to give cells rigidity. Without lignin, trees would be floppy and sag. This natural polymer is both cheap and safe. Through advanced engineering and chemistry, Sabliov and her team are able to wrap lignin molecules around other materials, such as agrochemicals. By using surfactants, they can keep the compounds homogeneously dispersed, similar to a vinaigrette that never separates, and then dry the resulting nanoparticles into a powder, extending their shelf life.
"I have a food science background and a biological engineering background and a chemical engineering background, so I absolutely love interfaces and learning about how things connect," said Sabliov, who is the Roy Paul Daniels Professor and the Richard R. & Betty S. Fenton Alumni Professor in the LSU Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering in the LSU College of Engineering with a joint appointment in the LSU AgCenter.
"It's nice to pay attention to what molecules like to do," Sabliov continued. "I think a lot about how molecules like to be with each other, or like to repel each other, or like to self-assemble in a certain way—their characteristics and relationships. If you create the right environment for a certain molecule, it will behave in a way that leads to nanoparticle formation, which in our case means that it will self-assemble into a ball around an agrochemical."
When it's time to test the nanoparticles—to see where they go and how they move when applied to plants—Sabliov uses hydroponics, which involves growing plants without soil. The reason is that soil introduces a host of unknown variables.
"Hydroponics is our steppingstone to greenhouse and field applications because it's a much simpler system without all of the chemicals and microorganisms that are naturally present in organic matter," Sabliov said. "If you start by testing the nanoparticles in soil, you will be in that for a long, long time before you can answer your research question with any certainty."
Once Sabliov is sure the loaded nanoparticles are both safe and effective, she collaborates with LSU AgCenter specialists to test them on plants in soil. Trey Price, a plant pathologist at the Macon Ridge Research Station in Winnsboro, Louisiana, recently harvested soybeans from an initial field trial where the seeds had been treated with Sabliov's fungicide-wrapped-in-lignin nanoparticles before being exposed to a fungus and common soybean pathogen called Rhizoctonia solani.
"We planted the treated seeds in two greenhouse experiments and a small field trial," Price said. "The soybeans that were treated with the fungicide-loaded nanoparticles did just as well as those that were treated with a broader formulation of commercial fungicide, while the plants that received no fungicide became diseased and yielded much less."
"Fungicides offer insurance against seedling diseases during the critical two-to-three weeks after planting and amount to a significant annual cost for many farmers," Price continued. "Field trials here at the research station are geared toward justifying or reducing those costs and keeping farmers in business."
Fungi cause most diseases in soybeans, and most of them thrive in warm and wet environments. Because of the sub-tropical climate, Louisiana farmers battle more problems than farmers elsewhere in the U.S. in protecting their crops from disease, according to Price. Soybeans are often grown in rotation with other crops for weed and disease control and to maximize profit. Crop prices fluctuate from season to season. In Louisiana, those crops tend to be wheat, corn, sorghum, rice and sugarcane grasses or, alternatively, cotton, a broadleaf. The production of soybeans in the state jumped radically during the agricultural revolution in the 1960s and '70s from about 100,000 acres to over 2 million. Today, soybeans are grown on roughly 1.1 million acres in Louisiana by more than 2,200 farmers.
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