A Liposomal Carrier to Reduce Leaching of Ionic Nutrient Loads in Agricultural Soils.
The use of inorganic nutrient fertilizers in crop agriculture is often inefficient due to rapid leaching of nutrients with percolating water in soil. To address this, a liposomal carrier was developed to slow transport and reduce leaching of inorganic nutrient loads within agricultural soils. Liposomes, spherical lipid bilayers, have been widely used in medicine but remain under-characterized for agricultural applications. Their biocompatibility, high loading capacity, and stability under certain compositions and environmental conditions suggest they could effectively deliver agrochemicals to crops. We present soil column experiments to evaluate the ability of a liposomal carrier to reduce the transport of an ionic tracer load, sodium bromide, under varying soil and water saturation conditions. Results from saturated column experiments demonstrate that encapsulation in liposomes slowed tracer transport and reduced leachate concentrations in sand and silty clay loam soils. Reduction in tracer leachate was also observed for unsaturated column experiments in silty clay loam soil. Subsequent experiments suggested a combination of processes (i.e., attachment, aggregation, physical exclusion, and biogenic immobilization) were responsible for the observed behavior of liposome encapsulated tracer in the soil column experiments. These findings support the use of liposomes as an effective carrier of inorganic nutrients to reduce leaching.
Duke Scholars
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Soil
- Nutrients
- Liposomes
- Fertilizers
- Environmental Sciences
- Agriculture
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Soil
- Nutrients
- Liposomes
- Fertilizers
- Environmental Sciences
- Agriculture