4.4 Article

Biochar addition to organo-mineral fertilisers delays nutrient leaching and enhances barley nutrient content

Journal

ARCHIVES OF AGRONOMY AND SOIL SCIENCE
Volume 69, Issue 13, Pages 2537-2551

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/03650340.2022.2161092

Keywords

Biochar-based fertilisers; nutrient leaching; barley; crop growth; nutrient content

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Biochar, produced from biomass pyrolysis, has gained attention as a potential fertiliser ingredient due to its ability to temporarily retain nutrients. A greenhouse experiment using barley as a model species compared fertilisers with and without slow-pyrolysis wood biochar. Results showed that the addition of biochar reduced nutrient leaching during the first two weeks, possibly due to microbial nutrient immobilisation. Furthermore, biochar-based fertilisers increased barley biomass and nutrient content, indicating their potential as a nutrient source.
Biochar, a carbon-rich solid produced from biomass pyrolysis, has attracted growing interest as a fertiliser ingredient due to its ability to non-permanently retain nutrients. A greenhouse pot experiment was set up to compare three commercial organo-mineral fertiliser formulations (NPK, NP and K) with the corresponding formulations containing a slow-pyrolysis wood biochar (NPK+B, NP+B and K+B) (6 replications each). Nutrient leaching as well as crop growth and nutrient uptake was monitored using barley as model species. Nutrient leaching was slowed down in the NPK+B compared to the NPK fertiliser. The most responsive ions were nitrate and potassium, whose leaching during the two first weeks was reduced by 28% and 22%, respectively, while this trend reversed from the third week on. One plausible explanation would be a microbial nutrient immobilisation mediated by the concurrent NPK and biochar habitat provision. NPK+B significantly enhanced barley straw biomass (23.43% increase respect to NPK), whereas all the biochar-based fertilisers showed increases in nutrient content and export (involving potassium, sulphur, calcium and manganese), possibly indicating that biochar acted as a nutrient source. These results provide some evidence of the potential use of the studied biochar in biochar-based fertilisers to meet nutrient availability with plant demands.

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