Interesting article and something viable to be sure. Finally they are working on some productivity projects to grow these commercially. A major concern is that this proposed use of polyacrylamide which is the major component to Hydrogels. These products break down and become toxic and they release potassium acrylate and acrylamide.
Acrylamide is a lethal neurotoxin and has been found to cause cancer in laboratory animals. It readily passes through the skin and can be inhaled as dust. Unfortunately, the chemical data sheets on hydrogels do not mention the fact that within a few years they will be composed entirely of these acrylamide units. Polyacrylamide is defined as “not readily biodegradable”
Fortunately I don't believe the landscape industry really utilizes these much anymore, but I may be wrong. I remember when some locations actually required their usage if you were establishing a lawn.
personally I don't think the PAM will be very effective in assisting biocrust establishment, judging from my past research. But, in this project we want to combine and cross many possible proposed biocrust delivery methods (with/without PAM, with/without shade, different levels of inoculation with crust organisms, etc.), because no study has done so.
I'd be interested in any references you know of on the ill effects of PAM.
Since this is only a research project, not a full scale field application, the area treated will only be small sub-meter plots.- Matt
Interesting article and something viable to be sure. Finally they are working on some productivity projects to grow these commercially. A major concern is that this proposed use of polyacrylamide which is the major component to Hydrogels. These products break down and become toxic and they release potassium acrylate and acrylamide.
ReplyDeleteAcrylamide is a lethal neurotoxin and has been found to cause cancer in laboratory animals. It readily passes through the skin and can be inhaled as dust. Unfortunately, the chemical data sheets on hydrogels do not mention the fact that within a few years they will be composed entirely of these acrylamide units. Polyacrylamide is defined as “not readily biodegradable”
Fortunately I don't believe the landscape industry really utilizes these much anymore, but I may be wrong. I remember when some locations actually required their usage if you were establishing a lawn.
Oh well, just a thought
Hi Timeless,
ReplyDeletepersonally I don't think the PAM will be very effective in assisting biocrust establishment, judging from my past research. But, in this project we want to combine and cross many possible proposed biocrust delivery methods (with/without PAM, with/without shade, different levels of inoculation with crust organisms, etc.), because no study has done so.
I'd be interested in any references you know of on the ill effects of PAM.
Since this is only a research project, not a full scale field application, the area treated will only be small sub-meter plots.- Matt