4.7 Article

Phosphorus availability from bone char in a P-fixing soil influenced by root-mycorrhizae-biochar interactions

Journal

PLANT AND SOIL
Volume 408, Issue 1-2, Pages 95-105

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11104-016-2905-2

Keywords

Arbuscular mycorrhizae; Biochar; Bone char; Nutrient acquisition strategies; Phosphorus adsorption

Funding

  1. Towards Sustainability Foundation
  2. CARE-Cornell Impact through Innovations Fund
  3. McKnight Foundation
  4. Bradfield Award
  5. Fulbright and Huygens Talent Scholarship Program
  6. Cornell Center for Materials Research under NSF award [DMR-0520404]

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The objectives of this study were to evaluate (1) the fertilizer potential of bone char, (2) the effects of wood biochar on plant-available phosphorus (P), and (3) the role of root-mycorrhizae-biochar interactions in plant P acquisition from a P-fixing soil. Incubation and pot experiments were conducted with a P-fixing soil and maize with or without root hairs and arbuscular mycorrhizae (AM) inoculation. Olsen-, resin-P and plant P accumulation were used to estimate P availability from bone char, co-pyrolyzed bone char-wood biochar, and separate bone char and wood biochar additions produced at 60, 350 and 750 A degrees C, and Triple Superphosphate (TSP). Maize inoculated with AM showed similar P accumulation when fertilized with either 750 A degrees C bone char or TSP. Pyrolyzing bone did not increase extractable P in soil in comparison to unpyrolyzed bone, apart from a 67 % increase in resin-extractable P after additions of bone char pyrolyzed at 350 A degrees C. Despite greater Olsen-P extractability, co-pyrolysis of bone with wood reduced maize P uptake. Wood biochars reduced resin-P from bone char by 14-26 %, whereas oven-dried wood increased resin-P by 23 %. Bone char is an effective P fertilizer, especially if root-AM interactions are simultaneously considered. Biochar influences plant access to soil P and requires careful management to improve P availability.

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