info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Sunflower seed hulls waste as a novel source of insecticidal product: Pyrolysis bio-oil bioactivity on insect pests of stored grains and products
Fecha
2020-11-05Registro en:
Urrutia, Rodrigo Iñaki; Yeguerman, Cristhian Alan; Jesser, Emiliano Nicolás; Gutierrez, Victoria Soledad; Volpe, María Alicia; et al.; Sunflower seed hulls waste as a novel source of insecticidal product: Pyrolysis bio-oil bioactivity on insect pests of stored grains and products; Elsevier; Journal Of Cleaner Production; 287; 5-11-2020; 1-11; 125000
0959-6526
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Urrutia, Rodrigo Iñaki
Yeguerman, Cristhian Alan
Jesser, Emiliano Nicolás
Gutierrez, Victoria Soledad
Volpe, María Alicia
Werdin Gonzalez, Jorge Omar
Resumen
The edible oil industry produces abundant sunflower seed hulls (SSH) as waste. Pyrolysis offers a sustainable method for producing high-value bioproducts from this lignocellulosic residue. This paper reports on the bioefficacy of SHH pyrolysis bio-oils from raw SSH (named SSH bio-oil) and acid pretreated hulls (named PTH bio-oil) as bioinsecticides against Sitophilus oryzae, Lasioderma serricorne and Tribolium castaneum. Raw SSH and pretreated hulls with 10% H3PO4 were subjected to fast pyrolysis in a vertical reactor at 450 °C. Results show that PTH bio-oil is a furfural enriched bio-liquid with storage stability and a yield of 33%. SSH bio-oil was unsuitable for evaluating biological activity since it produce high variability in mortality data. Incontrast, PTH bio-oil produces high insecticidal activity in S. oryzae (LC50= 0.51 mg cm-2 11 ) by contact toxicity bioassay, followed by L. serricorne and T. castaneum. In behavioral assays, PTH bio-oil shows a slight repellent effect and mobility reduction. Moreover, PTH bio-oil affects the nutritional physiology of S. oryzae and T. castaneum producing a modification of nutritional indices and antifeedant effects. Our study provides information on the potential of fast pyrolysis bio-oils from SSH waste to develop novel bioinsecticides as an alternative to the use of conventional synthetic pesticides.