4.2 Article

Compost and biosolids increase long-term soil organic carbon stocks

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CANADIAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

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CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/cjss-2022-0104

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carbon sequestration; carbon fractions; organic amendments; soil organic matter; temperate soils

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Biobased residues derived from organic urban waste materials can enhance soil fertility and carbon sequestration. The study used the Century model to predict the effects of different biobased residues (compost, anaerobic digestate, or biosolids) on soil organic carbon stocks in Ontario, Canada. The results showed that compost and biosolids significantly increased soil organic carbon stocks compared to anaerobic digestate and nitrogen fertilizer, and crop rotation also increased soil organic carbon stocks. The study highlights the importance of compost as a soil amendment for carbon sequestration.
Biobased residues derived from organic urban waste materials can be processed to produce soil amendments that enhance soil fertility and carbon sequestration. However, the extent of carbon sequestration by biobased residues depends on the interaction between their physicochemical properties, climate, and agroecosystem management practices. Our objective was to predict how different biobased residues (compost, anaerobic digestate, or biosolids), compared to nitrogen fertilizer, affect soil organic carbon stocks under continuous cropping and crop rotation in Ontario, Canada, using the Century model. The Century model was calibrated and validated with data, from a three-year field study located in Elora, Ontario, Canada, that was used to predict long-term changes in soil organic carbon. Our results showed that after 150 years, soil amended with compost and biosolids increased soil organic carbon stocks significantly (p < 0.05) compared to anaerobic digestate and nitrogen fertilizer. Soil organic carbon stocks were 1%-27% greater with crop rotation compared to continuous cropping. Model performance indicated a strong correlation between measured and simulated soil organic carbon stocks (R2 = 0.26-0.82; RMSD = 432-727 g m-2). Our findings suggested that compost had the greatest soil carbon sequestration potential of the tested soil amendments, and this difference was due to the quantity and quality of carbon input.

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