Dec. 7, 2023
By Jennifer Marston
While generally seen as safer for planetary health, biopesticides are frequently less effective than their synthetic counterparts, with success rates varying wildly. It’s one reason many growers remain hesitant to adopt this class of crop protection products.
US biotech startup AgroSpheres is addressing this with a novel delivery system that encapsulates and delivers pesticides to plants in a more targeted approach than traditional methods. This has the potential to reduce pesticide use and avoid the damage to biodiversity that often happens with conventional crop protection.
The AgroSpheres team. Image credit: AgroSpheres
″Our technology allows for manufacturing, encapsulation and delivery of that biological pesticide all in one platform,″ AgroSpheres cofounder and CEO Payam Pourtaheri tells AgFunderNews.
″I don’t think there are any other technologies out there that are working on biologicals in this form with an emphasis on manufacturing and delivery. They’re focused on maybe microbes as the active ingredient or they isolate one component such as a peptide and then figure out its optimal formulation for field delivery later.″
He believes Agrospheres’ differentiator is ″a fully vertically integrated platform where you can go from our proprietary strain to the finished, encapsulated product. And the encapsulation provides great stability during production, purification and shelf life — unprecedented stability for a biological material.″
Charlottesville, Virginia-based AgroSpheres just completed a $25 million Series B round after ″a strategic investment″ from agricultural sciences company FMC Corporation.
Lewis and Clark AgriFood, Ospraie Ag Science, BIDRA Ventures, and Cavallo Ventures also participated in the round.
‘One of the most important innovations’ in crop protection
Environmental factors such as high heat or UV rays can break down biologically derived ingredients in the field and impact performance of a biopesticide, says Pourtaheri.
AgroSpheres’ encapsulation technology forms a protective shell around the RNA, physically shielding active ingredients in a pesticide from environmental pressures. It can then deliver what the company says is ″a consistent gene silencing response so the crop protection product can perform as intended.″
″When the pest consumes a plant treated with AgriCell, the RNA provokes a rapid cellular response that terminates the pest.″ Because the approach is targeted, it does not impact other insects such as bees.
Both targeted pest and treatment biodegrade after this process; Pourtaheri highlights that AgroSphere’s tech is also ″fully microplastic-free.″
″Having a Ferrari is pretty meaningless if you don’t have the keys to start it,″ investor Carl Casale, senior agricultural partner at Ospraie Ag Science, says. ″AgroSpheres has the missing link in delivering reliable field performance and opening up new markets for high-performance biopesticides. We see it as one of the most important innovations in crop protection products in the last four decades.″
Continue reading at AgFunder News.
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