4.8 Article

Fate of soil-applied black carbon: downward migration, leaching and soil respiration

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 4, Pages 1366-1379

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2009.02044.x

Keywords

biochar; black carbon; carbon leaching; carbon sequestration; dissolved organic carbon; Oxisol; particulate organic carbon; soil carbon cycling; soil respiration

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Department of Crop and Soil Sciences at Cornell University
  3. Cornell's Center for the Environment
  4. USAID
  5. Cornell's Department of Crop and Soil Sciences
  6. Cornell's National Science Foundation (NSF) - Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship (IGERT) program
  7. Cornell's Graduate School

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Black carbon (BC) is an important pool of the global C cycle, because it cycles much more slowly than others and may even be managed for C sequestration. Using stable isotope techniques, we investigated the fate of BC applied to a savanna Oxisol in Colombia at rates of 0, 11.6, 23.2 and 116.1 t BC ha-1, as well as its effect on non-BC soil organic C. During the rainy seasons of 2005 and 2006, soil respiration was measured using soda lime traps, particulate and dissolved organic C (POC and DOC) moving by saturated flow was sampled continuously at 0.15 and 0.3 m, and soil was sampled to 2.0 m. Black C was found below the application depth of 0-0.1 m in the 0.15-0.3 m depth interval, with migration rates of 52.4 +/- 14.5, 51.8 +/- 18.5 and 378.7 +/- 196.9 kg C ha-1 yr-1 (+/- SE) where 11.6, 23.2 and 116.1 t BC ha-1, respectively, had been applied. Over 2 years after application, 2.2% of BC applied at 23.2 t BC ha-1 was lost by respiration, and an even smaller fraction of 1% was mobilized by percolating water. Carbon from BC moved to a greater extent as DOC than POC. The largest flux of BC from the field (20-53% of applied BC) was not accounted for by our measurements and is assumed to have occurred by surface runoff during intense rain events. Black C caused a 189% increase in aboveground biomass production measured 5 months after application (2.4-4.5 t additional dry biomass ha-1 where BC was applied), and this resulted in greater amounts of non-BC being respired, leached and found in soil for the duration of the experiment. These increases can be quantitatively explained by estimates of greater belowground net primary productivity with BC addition.

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