Mukhopadhyay Siddhartha S
Electron Microscopy and Nanoscience Laboratory, Punjab Agricultural University, Ludhiana, India.
Nanotechnol Sci Appl. 2014 Aug 4;7:63-71. doi: 10.2147/NSA.S39409. eCollection 2014.
Attempts to apply nanotechnology in agriculture began with the growing realization that conventional farming technologies would neither be able to increase productivity any further nor restore ecosystems damaged by existing technologies back to their pristine state; in particular because the long-term effects of farming with "miracle seeds", in conjunction with irrigation, fertilizers, and pesticides, have been questioned both at the scientific and policy levels, and must be gradually phased out. Nanotechnology in agriculture has gained momentum in the last decade with an abundance of public funding, but the pace of development is modest, even though many disciplines come under the umbrella of agriculture. This could be attributed to: a unique nature of farm production, which functions as an open system whereby energy and matter are exchanged freely; the scale of demand of input materials always being gigantic in contrast with industrial nanoproducts; an absence of control over the input nanomaterials in contrast with industrial nanoproducts (eg, the cell phone) and because their fate has to be conceived on the geosphere (pedosphere)-biosphere-hydrosphere-atmosphere continuum; the time lag of emerging technologies reaching the farmers' field, especially given that many emerging economies are unwilling to spend on innovation; and the lack of foresight resulting from agricultural education not having attracted a sufficient number of brilliant minds the world over, while personnel from kindred disciplines might lack an understanding of agricultural production systems. If these issues are taken care of, nanotechnologic intervention in farming has bright prospects for improving the efficiency of nutrient use through nanoformulations of fertilizers, breaking yield barriers through bionanotechnology, surveillance and control of pests and diseases, understanding mechanisms of host-parasite interactions at the molecular level, development of new-generation pesticides and their carriers, preservation and packaging of food and food additives, strengthening of natural fibers, removal of contaminants from soil and water, improving the shelf-life of vegetables and flowers, clay-based nanoresources for precision water management, reclamation of salt-affected soils, and stabilization of erosion-prone surfaces, to name a few.
将纳米技术应用于农业的尝试始于人们日益认识到,传统农业技术既无法进一步提高生产力,也无法将因现有技术而受损的生态系统恢复到原始状态;特别是因为使用“神奇种子”结合灌溉、化肥和农药进行耕种的长期影响在科学和政策层面都受到了质疑,并且必须逐步淘汰。在过去十年中,随着大量公共资金的投入,农业纳米技术发展势头迅猛,但发展速度较为缓慢,尽管许多学科都属于农业范畴。这可能归因于:农场生产的独特性质,它作为一个开放系统,能量和物质可自由交换;与工业纳米产品相比,投入材料的需求规模始终巨大;与工业纳米产品(如手机)相比,对输入纳米材料缺乏控制,并且因为它们的归宿必须在地球圈(土壤圈)-生物圈-水圈-大气圈连续体中加以考虑;新兴技术进入农民田地存在时间滞后,特别是鉴于许多新兴经济体不愿在创新方面投入资金;以及农业教育未能吸引全球足够数量的优秀人才,而相关学科的人员可能缺乏对农业生产系统的了解,从而导致缺乏前瞻性。如果这些问题得到解决,纳米技术对农业的干预在通过肥料纳米制剂提高养分利用效率、通过生物纳米技术突破产量障碍、病虫害监测与控制、在分子水平上理解宿主 - 寄生虫相互作用机制、开发新一代农药及其载体、食品和食品添加剂的保鲜与包装、强化天然纤维、去除土壤和水中的污染物、延长蔬菜和花卉的保质期、基于粘土的纳米资源用于精准水管理、盐碱地改良以及易侵蚀表面的稳定等方面具有光明前景。