4.7 Article

Effects of two wood-based biochars on the fate of added fertilizer nitrogen-a 15N tracing study

Journal

BIOLOGY AND FERTILITY OF SOILS
Volume 57, Issue 4, Pages 457-470

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00374-020-01534-0

Keywords

Ammonium; Flame curtain pyrolysis; Kon-Tiki kiln; N leaching; Nitrate; Nitrous oxide

Categories

Funding

  1. University of Helsinki [HY/66/05.01.07/2017]
  2. HiLIFE Fellows funding [797011054]

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The study showed that application of biochar can reduce soil nitrogen gas emissions and nitrogen leaching, while increasing plant biomass. However, there were no significant differences in N2O emissions and plant biomass between nutrient-enriched biochar and regular biochar treatments, although they did affect soil mineral nitrogen leaching.
A N-15 tracing pot experiment was conducted using two types of wood-based biochars: a regular biochar and a Kon-Tiki-produced nutrient-enriched biochar, at two application rates (1% and 5% (w/w)), in addition to a fertilizer only and a control treatment. Ryegrass was sown in pots, all of which except controls received N-15-labelled fertilizer as either (NH4NO3)-N-15 or (NH4NO3)-N-15. We quantified the effect of biochar application on soil N2O emissions, as well as the fate of fertilizer-derived ammonium (NH4+) and nitrate (NO3-) in terms of their leaching from the soil, uptake into plant biomass, and recovery in the soil. We found that application of biochars reduced soil mineral N leaching and N2O emissions. Similarly, the higher biochar application rate of 5% significantly increased aboveground ryegrass biomass yield. However, no differences in N2O emissions and ryegrass biomass yields were observed between regular and nutrient-enriched biochar treatments, although mineral N leaching tended to be lower in the nutrient-enriched biochar treatment than in the regular biochar treatment. The N-15 analysis revealed that biochar application increased the plant uptake of added nitrate, but reduced the plant uptake of added ammonium compared to the fertilizer only treatment. Thus, the uptake of total N derived from added NH4NO3 fertilizer was not affected by the biochar addition, and cannot explain the increase in plant biomass in biochar treatments. Instead, the increased plant biomass at the higher biochar application rate was attributed to the enhanced uptake of N derived from soil. This suggests that the interactions between biochar and native soil organic N may be important determinants of the availability of soil N to plant growth.

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