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Phytolith‐rich biochar increases cotton biomass and silicon‐mineralomass in a highly weathered soil
Author(s) -
Li Zimin,
Delvaux Bruno,
Yans Johan,
Dufour Nicolas,
Houben David,
Cornelis JeanThomas
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of plant nutrition and soil science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.644
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1522-2624
pISSN - 1436-8730
DOI - 10.1002/jpln.201800031
Subject(s) - biochar , cambisol , soil water , biomass (ecology) , chemistry , bioavailability , fertilizer , amendment , pyrolysis , environmental chemistry , agronomy , environmental science , soil science , biology , bioinformatics , political science , law , organic chemistry
Non‐essential silicon (Si) is beneficial to plants. It increases the biomass of Si‐accumulator plants by improving photosynthetic activity and alleviating stresses. Desilication, however, takes place because of natural soil weathering and removal of harvested biomass. Pyrolysis transforms Si‐rich biomass into biochar that can be used to supply bioavailable Si. Here, we applied two biochar materials differing in Si content on soils differing in weathering stage: a young Cambisol and a highly weathered Nitisol. We studied the impact of biochar supply on the bioavailability of Si, cotton biomass, and Si mineralomass. The biochar materials derived from, respectively: Miscanthus × giganteus (Mi; 34.6 g Si kg −1 in biochar) and soft woody material (SW; 0.9 g Si kg −1 in biochar). They were compared to conventional Si fertilizer wollastonite (Wo; CaSiO 3 ). Amendments were incorporated in soils at the rate of 3% (w/w). The content of bioavailable Si in soil was determined through 0.01 M CaCl 2 extraction. In the Cambisol, the proportion (CaCl 2 extractable Si: total Si content) was significantly smaller for Mi (0.9%) than for Wo (5.2%). In the Nitisol, this proportion was much larger for Mi (1.4%) than for Wo (0.7%). Mi‐biochar significantly increased Si‐mineralomass relatively to SW‐biochar in both soils. This increase was, however, much larger in the Nitisol (5.9‐fold) than in the Cambisol (2.2‐fold). Mi biochar is thus an alternative Si fertilizer to Wo to supply bioavailable Si, increase plant biomass, and promote the biological cycle of Si in the soil‐plant system in the Nitisol. Besides, it increased soil fertility and soil organic carbon content.