Polymers (Dec 2022)

Superabsorbent Polymers as a Soil Amendment for Increasing Agriculture Production with Reducing Water Losses under Water Stress Condition

  • Shweta Malik,
  • Kautilya Chaudhary,
  • Anurag Malik,
  • Himani Punia,
  • Meena Sewhag,
  • Neelam Berkesia,
  • Mehak Nagora,
  • Sonika Kalia,
  • Kamla Malik,
  • Deepak Kumar,
  • Pardeep Kumar,
  • Ekta Kamboj,
  • Vishal Ahlawat,
  • Abhishek Kumar,
  • Kavita Boora

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/polym15010161
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
p. 161

Abstract

Read online

With an increasing population, world agriculture is facing many challenges, such as climate change, urbanization, the use of natural resources in a sustainable manner, runoff losses, and the accumulation of pesticides and fertilizers. The global water shortage is a crisis for agriculture, because drought is one of the natural disasters that affect the farmers as well as their country’s social, economic, and environmental status. The application of soil amendments is a strategy to mitigate the adverse impact of drought stress. The development of agronomic strategies enabling the reduction in drought stress in cultivated crops is, therefore, a crucial priority. Superabsorbent polymers (SAPs) can be used as an amendment for soil health improvement, ultimately improving water holding capacity and plant available water. These are eco-friendly and non-toxic materials, which have incredible water absorption ability and water holding capacity in the soil because of their unique biochemical and structural properties. Polymers can retain water more than their weight in water and achieve approximately 95% water release. SAP improve the soil like porosity (0.26–6.91%), water holding capacity (5.68–17.90%), and reduce nitrogen leaching losses from soil by up to 45%. This review focuses on the economic assessment of the adoption of superabsorbent polymers and brings out the discrepancies associated with the influence of SAPs application in the context of different textured soil, presence of drought, and their adoption by farmers.

Keywords