Alba Llovet, Andrea Vidal-Durà, J. Alcañiz, À. Ribas, X. Domene
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
ABSTRACT 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.
期刊介绍:
rchives of Agronomy and Soil Science is a well-established journal that has been in publication for over fifty years. The Journal publishes papers over the entire range of agronomy and soil science. Manuscripts involved in developing and testing hypotheses to understand casual relationships in the following areas:
plant nutrition
fertilizers
manure
soil tillage
soil biotechnology and ecophysiology
amelioration
irrigation and drainage
plant production on arable and grass land
agroclimatology
landscape formation and environmental management in rural regions
management of natural and created wetland ecosystems
bio-geochemical processes
soil-plant-microbe interactions and rhizosphere processes
soil morphology, classification, monitoring, heterogeneity and scales
reuse of waste waters and biosolids of agri-industrial origin in soil are especially encouraged.
As well as original contributions, the Journal also publishes current reviews.