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<title>Doctorado en Ciencias Agrarias y Agroindustriales</title>
<link>https://repositorio.unicauca.edu.co/xmlui/handle/123456789/2385</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Fri, 15 May 2026 13:21:02 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-05-15T13:21:02Z</dc:date>
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<title>Biological degradation of a cassava starch and polylactic acid film by  Ulomoides dermestoides (Chevrolat, 1878)</title>
<link>https://repositorio.unicauca.edu.co/xmlui/handle/123456789/1595</link>
<description>Biological degradation of a cassava starch and polylactic acid film by  Ulomoides dermestoides (Chevrolat, 1878); Degradación biológica de una película de almidón de yuca y ácido poliláctico por Ulomoides dermestoides (Chevrolat, 1878)
Salazar Sánchez, Margarita del Rosario
On the planet the management of plastic waste has become an environmental&#13;
problem, which has given rise to policies of rationalization of the use of plastic materials.&#13;
Plastic recovery technologies use as raw material, recovered material, which is also used as&#13;
an energy source, however these alternatives have proved inefficient and are far from being&#13;
a definitive solution to this problem (E. Rudnik &amp; Briassoulis, 2011).&#13;
&#13;
The increase in the use of plastics is harmful to the environment, which has resulted&#13;
in the world turning its gaze towards biodegradable polymers, especially those from&#13;
agricultural raw materials, which has shown an opportunity to use renewable sources in&#13;
the production of some of these polymers and reduce dependence on the use of&#13;
petrochemical sources (Versino, López, &amp; García, 2015), in this context at the University&#13;
of Cauca, films obtained from thermoplastic cassava starch (TPS) and polylactic acid&#13;
(PLA) have been proposed as biodegradable plastics (Villada et al., 2008 Acosta Zuleta et&#13;
al., 2007;Navia &amp; Villada Castillo, 2013; Palechor Tróchez et al., 2016; Velasco Mosquera et&#13;
al., 2008; Villada Castillo et al., 2012; Villada et al., 2008) with potential industrial and&#13;
commercial uses. However, under uncontrolled composting conditions, the&#13;
biodegradability of this type of material may be of low efficiency, so it is necessary to&#13;
develop alternative procedures to verify its biological degradation (Shah et al., 2008, Iovino&#13;
et al., 2008; Smetana et al., 2016; Bassi, 2017). The above, due to the use of this type of&#13;
materials in a range of multiple applications, such as food packaging products, containers,&#13;
films, foams including agriculture (Glenn, Orts, Imam, Chiou, &amp; Wood, 2014; Palechor&#13;
Tróchez et al., 2016), has become a problem of global magnitude, due to the short time of&#13;
use, and the final disposal of these materials, which is increasingly severe (Tumwesigye,&#13;
Oliveira, &amp; Gallagher, 2016).&#13;
&#13;
This investigation has been developed in accordance with the studies of&#13;
biodegradable packaging development of the University of Cauca, and in general as an&#13;
alternative towards the sustainable and sustainable development of the investigations&#13;
around biodegradable polymers. In order to achieve this study, three objectives were&#13;
proposed that respond to the phases of biodegradation in a joint and integral manner,&#13;
which allow elucidating the scope of the proposal for the sake of social transference: i)&#13;
Evaluate the degree of disintegration of a plastic film of cassava starch and polylasctic acid&#13;
by monitoring its structural changes caused by Ulomoides dermestoides, ii) Determine the&#13;
degree of mineralization of a plastic film of cassava starch and polylactic acid by&#13;
quantifying carbon dioxide (CO2) produced by Ulomoides dermestoides and iii) Evaluate the&#13;
effect of the assimilation of a plastic film of cassava starch and polylactic acid on Ulomoides&#13;
dermestoides.
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<pubDate>Mon, 20 May 2019 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2019-05-20T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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