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Nanotechnology-Based Sustainable Alternatives for the Management of Plant Diseases. Micro and Nano Technologies

  • Book

  • November 2021
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5390182

Nanotechnology-based Sustainable Alternatives for the Management of Plant Diseases addresses the power of sustainable nanomaterials for plant and food protection. The book highlights dangers arising from bacteria, fungi, viruses, insects, seeds, plants, fruits and food production and summarizes new and sustainable strategies. It places a particular focus on plant pathogen control, and in the food packaging sector in agri-food applications. The control of plant pathogens in plants and in food has been conventionally made by adding chemical preservatives and by using thermal processing, but sustainable nanotechnology can be a power tool to aid in this complex set of challenges.

Advances in materials science have led to the rapid development of nanotechnology that has great potential for improving food safety as a powerful tool for the delivery and controlled release of natural antimicrobials.

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction

Giorgio Mariano Balestra and Elena Fortunati

2. Natural or green synthesis nanomaterials and impact on plant pathogens

Manoj Choudhary, Jeffrey B. Jones, and Mathews L. Paret

3. Controlled biocide release from smart delivery systems: materials engineering to tune release rate, biointeractions, and responsiveness

Francesca Biondo, Francesca Baldassarre, Viviana Vergaro, and Giuseppe Ciccarella

4. Nanoscale characterization methods in plant disease management

Francesco Marinello, Francesca Anna Scaramuzzo, Simone Dinarelli, Daniele Passeri, and Marco Rossi

5. Organic antimicrobial nanomaterials and reducing copper use in sustainable plant protection

Giorgio Mariano Balestra, Veronica di Lorenzo, and Elena Fortunati

6. Inorganic nanomaterials usable in plant protection strategies

Sara Francesconi, Daniele Schiavi, Veronica di Lorenzo, and Giorgio Mariano Balestra

7. Utility of nanoparticles in management of plant viruses

Renato Carvalho, Jeffrey B. Jones, and Mathews L. Paret

8. Potential applications of nanotechnology in seed technology for improved plant health

Ying-Yu Liao, Alejandra I. Huerta, Jeffrey B. Jones, and Mathews L. Paret

9. Nanotechnology-based green and efficient alternatives for the management of plant diseases

Angela Tartaglia, Marcello Locatelli, Felisa Cilurzo, Christian Celia, Luisa Di Marzio, Francesca Froiio, Donatella Paolino, D'Ambrosio Francesca, and Ramundo Piera

10. Nanotechnology-enabled phytodiagnostics on the brink of farm usage

Jyutika Rajwade and Kishore Paknikar

11. Carbon nanostructure-based sensor: a promising tools for monitoring crops

Shagufta Afreen, Neetu Talreja, Mohammad Ashfaq, and Divya Chauhan

12. Plant and human health: the new era of biobased nanoscale systems

Elisa Panzarini, Elisabetta Carata, Stefania Mariano, Bernardetta Anna Tenuzzo, Stefano Tacconi, Marco Fidaleo, and Luciana Dini

13. Metal-organic framework as an emerging material: a novel plant growth stimulant

Divya Chauhan, Rishabh Anand Omar, R.V. Mangalaraja, Mohammad Ashfaq, and Neetu Talreja

14. Nano metal-carbonebased materials: emerging platform for the growth and protection of crops

Rishabh Anand Omar, Neetu Talreja, Divya Chauhan, R.V. Mangalaraja, and Mohammad Ashfaq

15. Biopolymers and nanomaterials in food packaging and applications

Vaishally Dogra, Deepak Verma, and Elena Fortunati

Authors

Giorgio Mariano Balestra Associate Professor, Department of Agriculture and Forest Sciences, University of Tuscia, Italy. Giorgio Mariano Balestra is an Associate Professor in the Department of Agriculture and Forest Sciences, at University of Tuscia, Italy. His research interests are plant pathology and on phytobacteriology for: biological control in open field, greenhouse, nursery of phytopathogenic bacteria, by using natural substances and biocontrol agents (BCA's).Other research alorization of agro-food wastes to develop organic plant protection strategies, reduction of agrochemicals to control of harmful pathogenic microorganisms on tropical and subtropical crops, sustainable plant protection strategies in developing countries, biology and epidemiology of phytopathogenic bacteria, abiotic and biotic factors influencing populations of phytopathogenic bacteria, and genetic-molecular characterization of phytopathogenic bacteria. Elena Fortunati University of Perugia, Department of Civil Engineering, UdR INSTM, Italy. Elena Fortunati, graduated in 2007 in Materials Engineering and she was awarded a Ph.D. in Nanotechnology of Materials at the University of Perugia, in 2010. Since January 2011 she has been a researcher (post-doctoral) at the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department/Faculty of Engineering /Materials Science and Technology (STM) Group. She has attended and spoken at over 30 International Conferences and is author of more than 50 articles in refereed journals and book chapters, most of them concerning waste re-valorization and use, extraction of cellulose nanocrystals and their use in nanocomposites for industrial applications.