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Carbon mineralization and nutrient availability in calcareous sandy soils amended with woody waste biochar

Research Authors
Ahmed H. El-Naggar, Adel R.A. Usman, Abdulrasoul Al-Omran, Yong Sik Ok, Mahtab Ahmad, Mohammad I. Al-Wabel.
Research Abstract

Many studies have reported the positive effect of biochar on soil carbon sequestration and soil fertility improvement in acidic soils. However, biochar may have different impacts on calcareous sandy soils. A 90-day incubation experiment was conducted to quantify the effects of woody waste biochar (10 g kg-1) on CO2–C emissions, K2SO4-extractable C and macro-(N, P and K) and micro-(Fe, Mn, Zn and Cu) nutrient availability in the presence or absence of poultry manure (5 g kg-1 soil). The following six treatments were applied: (1) conocarpus (Conocarpus erectus L.) waste (CW), (2) conocarpus biochar (BC), (3) poultry manure (PM), (4) PM + CW, (5) PM + BC and (6) untreated soil (CK). Poultry manure increased CO2–C emissions and K2SO4-extractable C, and the highest increases in CO2–C emission rate and cumulative CO2–C and K2SO4-extractable C were observed for the PM + CW treatment. On the contrary, treatments with BC halted the CO2–C emission rate, indicating that the contribution of BC to CO2–C emissions is negligible compared with the soils amended with CW and PM. Furthermore, the combined addition of PM + BC increased available N, P and K compared with the PM or BC treatments. Overall, the incorporation of biochar into calcareous soils might have benefits in carbon sequestration and soil fertility improvement.

Research Department
Research Journal
Chemosphere
Research Member
Research Publisher
Elsevier
Research Rank
1
Research Vol
138
Research Website
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0045653515005159
Research Year
2015
Research Pages
67-73