4.6 Article

Impacts of a porous hollow silica nanoparticle-encapsulated pesticide applied to soils on plant growth and soil microbial community

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE-NANO
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages 1476-1488

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1en00975c

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN-2016-05022, 506450-17]
  2. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec - Nature et Technologies [286120]
  3. Canada Foundation for Innovation/John R. Evans Leaders Fund grant [35318]
  4. McGill Engineering Doctoral Award

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Porous silica nanocarriers encapsulating pesticides have minimal impacts on soil microbial community and plant development, while non-encapsulated pesticides inhibit plant growth and increase toxicity to plants. The slow release of pesticides from nanocarriers prevents phytotoxicity and promotes healthy plant growth.
Porous silica nanocarriers have the potential to improve agricultural crop productivity. However, the impacts of nanoencapsulated pesticides on soil health and plant growth, and how they compare with conventional pesticides have not been systematically elucidated. In this study, we investigated how applying azoxystrobin encapsulated in porous hollow SiO2 nanocarriers to agricultural soil impacted the soil microbial community and plant development, using Solanum lycopersicum grown in the laboratory in soil microcosms. The data show that plant growth was heavily inhibited by the non-encapsulated pesticide treatment compared to that with encapsulated pesticide yielding 3.85-fold less plant biomass, while the soil microbial community experienced few to no changes regardless of the treatment. There was a 2.7-fold higher azoxystrobin uptake per unit dry plant biomass after 10 days of exposure for the non-encapsulated pesticide treatment when compared to that of nanoencapsulated pesticide, but only 1.5-fold increase in total uptake. After 20 days of exposure, however, the total uptake and uptake per unit of dry biomass were 3-fold and 10-fold higher, respectively, for the nanopesticide treatment. The differences in uptake can be attributed to phytotoxicity caused by the high bioavailability of the non-encapsulated pesticide. The nanocarrier promoted slow release of the pesticide over days, which prevented phytotoxicity, and allowed healthy plant growth.

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