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Effects of biochar amendment on greenhouse gas emissions, net ecosystem carbon budget and properties of an acidic soil under intensive vegetable production
Author(s) -
Wang J.,
Chen Z.,
Xiong Z.,
Chen C.,
Xu X.,
Zhou Q.,
Kuzyakov Y.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
soil use and management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.709
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1475-2743
pISSN - 0266-0032
DOI - 10.1111/sum.12202
Subject(s) - biochar , amendment , slash and char , agronomy , fertilizer , soil water , environmental science , carbon sequestration , greenhouse gas , soil fertility , compost , chemistry , soil carbon , soil conditioner , nitrogen , pyrolysis , soil science , ecology , biology , political science , law , organic chemistry
Abstract Biochar addition to soils has been frequently proposed as a means to increase soil fertility and carbon (C) sequestration. However, the effect of biochar addition on greenhouse gas emissions from intensively managed soils under vegetable production at the field scale is poorly understood. The effects of wheat straw biochar amendment with mineral fertilizer or an enhanced‐efficiency fertilizer (mixture of urea and nitrapyrin) on N 2 O efflux and the net ecosystem C budget were investigated for an acidic soil in southeast China over a 1‐yr period. Biochar addition did not affect the annual N 2 O emissions (26–28 kg N/ha), but reduced seasonal N 2 O emissions during the cold period. Biochar increased soil organic C and CO 2 efflux on average by 61 and 19%, respectively. Biochar addition greatly increased C gain in the acidic soil (average 11.1 Mg C/ha) compared with treatments without biochar addition (average −2.2 Mg C/ha). Biochar amendment did not increase yield‐scaled N 2 O emissions after application of mineral fertilizer, but it decreased yield‐scaled N 2 O by 15% after nitrapyrin addition. Our results suggest that biochar amendment of acidic soil under intensive vegetable cultivation contributes to soil C sequestration, but has only small effects on both plant growth and greenhouse gas emissions.