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Applications of Starch Biopolymers for a Sustainable Modern Agriculture

Sustainability 2022 119 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ashoka Gamage, Sudhagar Mani, Anuradhi Liyanapathiranage, Asanga Manamperi, Asanga Manamperi, Chamila Gunathilake Ashoka Gamage, Othmane Merah, Sudhagar Mani, Othmane Merah, Chamila Gunathilake Terrence Madhujith, Chamila Gunathilake

Summary

This review explores how starch-based biopolymers can replace conventional plastic products in agriculture, including mulch films, packaging, and soil amendments. Researchers found that starch bioplastics are biodegradable under natural conditions and can reduce the accumulation of microplastics in agricultural soils. The study highlights the potential of these bio-based materials to support more sustainable farming practices while reducing plastic pollution.

Polymers

Protected cultivation in modern agriculture relies extensively on plastic-originated mulch films, nets, packaging, piping, silage, and various applications. Polyolefins synthesized from petrochemical routes are vastly consumed in plasticulture, wherein PP and PE are the dominant commodity plastics. Imposing substantial impacts on our geosphere and humankind, plastics in soil threaten food security, health, and the environment. Mismanaged plastics are not biodegradable under natural conditions and generate problematic emerging pollutants such as nano-micro plastics. Post-consumed petrochemical plastics from agriculture face many challenges in recycling and reusing due to soil contamination in fulfilling the zero waste hierarchy. Hence, biodegradable polymers from renewable sources for agricultural applications are pragmatic as mitigation. Starch is one of the most abundant biodegradable biopolymers from renewable sources; it also contains tunable thermoplastic properties suitable for diverse applications in agriculture. Functional performances of starch such as physicomechanical, barrier, and surface chemistry may be altered for extended agricultural applications. Furthermore, starch can be a multidimensional additive for plasticulture that can function as a filler, a metaphase component in blends/composites, a plasticizer, an efficient carrier for active delivery of biocides, etc. A substantial fraction of food and agricultural wastes and surpluses of starch sources are underutilized, without harnessing useful resources for agriscience. Hence, this review proposes reliable solutions from starch toward timely implementation of sustainable practices, circular economy, waste remediation, and green chemistry for plasticulture in agriscience

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