{"title":"可持续土壤管理的生物炭改良剂","authors":"N. Ziadi, M. Oelbermann, J. Whalen","doi":"10.1139/CJSS-2022-0006","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Biochar is a carbon-rich product that is generated when a sustainable source of biomass such as wood, crop residues, or manure is thermally degraded at high temperatures under oxygen-limited conditions. The first evidence of biochar use as a soil amendment comes from paleosols in the Brazilian Amazon and is estimated to have begun more than 2000 years ago. Modernday research finds that adding biochar to nutrientimpoverished tropical soil can improve soil properties and crop productivity because biochar increases soil pH and reduces aluminum toxicity. However, soils in cold temperate regions may have a higher pH, higher soil organic matter and nutrient content, high activity clays, and lower oxide contents and are expected to respond differently to biochar than tropical soils. Adding biochar to intensively managed temperate soils is a recent agricultural innovation. Although the research is still in its infancy, there is growing interest in assessing the potential of biochar as a soil amendment for agricultural and high-valued horticultural crops in colder regions of the world. This special issue was proposed due to the enthusiastic interest in biochar research that was expressed by participants at the annual meeting of the Canadian Society of Soil Science held in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada from 9 to 13 July 2019. Our goal was to gather the most current findings that would help explain the functions of biochar in cold, temperate soils. In agroecosystems, biochar applications can boost soil nutrient availability while contributing to soil fertility (Gagnon et al. 2022; Li et al. 2022; Abedin and Unc 2022; Lévesque et al. 2022b), and influencing crop productivity (Alotaibi 2022; Hung et al. 2022; Shang et al. 2022). Research also shows that biochar is most effective in improving soil properties when it is combined or co-processed with another soil amendment such as compost, manure, paper mill sludge, or biosolids (Manirakiza et al. 2022; Ziadi et al. 2022; Hangs et al. 2022). Although the majority of biochar research has focused on soil and field crops, there is an emerging body of literature that examines the potential for biochar use in the horticultural industry for both fruit and vegetable production (Messiga et al. 2022a; Shang et al. 2022). The influence of biochar on climate change mitigation and its impact on soil and crop productivity have also been examined (Jiang et al. 2022a, 2022b; Deng et al. 2022; Weber et al. 2022). It has been proposed that biochar is a carbon-negative soil amendment and can be used as a climate change mitigation strategy in temperate agriculture (Lévesque et al. 2022a). The proposed mechanisms for climate change mitigation of biochar are a molecular structure dominated by aromatic carbon blocks that make it more resistant to microbial decomposition, allowing it to persist in soil for thousands of years and potentially curbing greenhouse gas emissions (Messiga et al. 2022a, 2022b; Deng et al. 2022). Biochar physical and chemical properties have become useful in site restoration projects in forest ecosystems and urban soils due to its ability to adsorb and immobilize organic chemicals (Bieser et al. 2022). Manuscripts in this special issue help bridge our current knowledge gap and recognize the contribution of biochar in temperate agricultural soils as a way forward to sustainable crop productivity, healthy soils, and climate change mitigation.","PeriodicalId":9384,"journal":{"name":"Canadian Journal of Soil Science","volume":"102 1","pages":"vii - viii"},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2022-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Biochar amendments for sustainable soil management\",\"authors\":\"N. Ziadi, M. Oelbermann, J. Whalen\",\"doi\":\"10.1139/CJSS-2022-0006\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Biochar is a carbon-rich product that is generated when a sustainable source of biomass such as wood, crop residues, or manure is thermally degraded at high temperatures under oxygen-limited conditions. The first evidence of biochar use as a soil amendment comes from paleosols in the Brazilian Amazon and is estimated to have begun more than 2000 years ago. Modernday research finds that adding biochar to nutrientimpoverished tropical soil can improve soil properties and crop productivity because biochar increases soil pH and reduces aluminum toxicity. However, soils in cold temperate regions may have a higher pH, higher soil organic matter and nutrient content, high activity clays, and lower oxide contents and are expected to respond differently to biochar than tropical soils. Adding biochar to intensively managed temperate soils is a recent agricultural innovation. Although the research is still in its infancy, there is growing interest in assessing the potential of biochar as a soil amendment for agricultural and high-valued horticultural crops in colder regions of the world. This special issue was proposed due to the enthusiastic interest in biochar research that was expressed by participants at the annual meeting of the Canadian Society of Soil Science held in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada from 9 to 13 July 2019. Our goal was to gather the most current findings that would help explain the functions of biochar in cold, temperate soils. In agroecosystems, biochar applications can boost soil nutrient availability while contributing to soil fertility (Gagnon et al. 2022; Li et al. 2022; Abedin and Unc 2022; Lévesque et al. 2022b), and influencing crop productivity (Alotaibi 2022; Hung et al. 2022; Shang et al. 2022). Research also shows that biochar is most effective in improving soil properties when it is combined or co-processed with another soil amendment such as compost, manure, paper mill sludge, or biosolids (Manirakiza et al. 2022; Ziadi et al. 2022; Hangs et al. 2022). Although the majority of biochar research has focused on soil and field crops, there is an emerging body of literature that examines the potential for biochar use in the horticultural industry for both fruit and vegetable production (Messiga et al. 2022a; Shang et al. 2022). The influence of biochar on climate change mitigation and its impact on soil and crop productivity have also been examined (Jiang et al. 2022a, 2022b; Deng et al. 2022; Weber et al. 2022). It has been proposed that biochar is a carbon-negative soil amendment and can be used as a climate change mitigation strategy in temperate agriculture (Lévesque et al. 2022a). The proposed mechanisms for climate change mitigation of biochar are a molecular structure dominated by aromatic carbon blocks that make it more resistant to microbial decomposition, allowing it to persist in soil for thousands of years and potentially curbing greenhouse gas emissions (Messiga et al. 2022a, 2022b; Deng et al. 2022). Biochar physical and chemical properties have become useful in site restoration projects in forest ecosystems and urban soils due to its ability to adsorb and immobilize organic chemicals (Bieser et al. 2022). 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引用次数: 0
摘要
生物炭是一种富含碳的产品,当可持续的生物质来源,如木材、作物残留物或粪便在缺氧条件下高温热降解时产生。生物炭作为土壤改良剂使用的第一个证据来自巴西亚马逊河流域的古土壤,据估计,这种使用始于2000多年前。现代研究发现,向营养贫乏的热带土壤中添加生物炭可以改善土壤特性和作物生产力,因为生物炭增加了土壤的pH值,减少了铝的毒性。然而,寒温带地区的土壤可能具有更高的pH值,更高的土壤有机质和养分含量,高活性粘土和较低的氧化物含量,并且预计对生物炭的反应与热带土壤不同。向集中管理的温带土壤中添加生物炭是最近的一项农业创新。尽管这项研究仍处于起步阶段,但是人们对评估生物炭作为世界较冷地区农业和高价值园艺作物土壤改良剂的潜力越来越感兴趣。由于2019年7月9日至13日在加拿大萨斯喀彻温省萨斯卡通举行的加拿大土壤科学学会年会上与会者对生物炭研究表达了浓厚的兴趣,因此提出了这一特刊。我们的目标是收集最新的发现,这将有助于解释生物炭在寒冷、温带土壤中的功能。在农业生态系统中,生物炭应用可以提高土壤养分利用率,同时有助于土壤肥力(Gagnon等人,2022;Li et al. 2022;Abedin和Unc 2022;lsamuvesque等人,2022b)和影响作物生产力(Alotaibi 2022;Hung et al. 2022;Shang et al. 2022)。研究还表明,当生物炭与另一种土壤改良剂(如堆肥、粪肥、造纸厂污泥或生物固体)结合或协同处理时,生物炭在改善土壤特性方面最有效(Manirakiza et al. 2022;Ziadi et al. 2022;hang et al. 2022)。虽然大多数生物炭研究都集中在土壤和田间作物上,但有一个新兴的文献机构研究了生物炭在园艺工业中用于水果和蔬菜生产的潜力(Messiga et al. 2022a;Shang et al. 2022)。还研究了生物炭对减缓气候变化的影响及其对土壤和作物生产力的影响(Jiang等,2022a, 2022b;Deng et al. 2022;Weber et al. 2022)。有人提出,生物炭是一种碳负性土壤改良剂,可在温带农业中用作减缓气候变化的战略(lsamuvesque等人,2022a)。生物炭减缓气候变化的拟议机制是一种由芳香碳块主导的分子结构,使其更能抵抗微生物分解,使其能够在土壤中持续存在数千年,并有可能抑制温室气体排放(Messiga等人。2022a, 2022b;Deng et al. 2022)。由于生物炭具有吸附和固定有机化学物质的能力,其物理和化学特性在森林生态系统和城市土壤的场地恢复项目中变得非常有用(Bieser et al. 2022)。本期特刊的稿件有助于弥合我们目前的知识差距,并认识到生物炭在温带农业土壤中的贡献,是实现可持续作物生产力、健康土壤和减缓气候变化的一种途径。
Biochar amendments for sustainable soil management
Biochar is a carbon-rich product that is generated when a sustainable source of biomass such as wood, crop residues, or manure is thermally degraded at high temperatures under oxygen-limited conditions. The first evidence of biochar use as a soil amendment comes from paleosols in the Brazilian Amazon and is estimated to have begun more than 2000 years ago. Modernday research finds that adding biochar to nutrientimpoverished tropical soil can improve soil properties and crop productivity because biochar increases soil pH and reduces aluminum toxicity. However, soils in cold temperate regions may have a higher pH, higher soil organic matter and nutrient content, high activity clays, and lower oxide contents and are expected to respond differently to biochar than tropical soils. Adding biochar to intensively managed temperate soils is a recent agricultural innovation. Although the research is still in its infancy, there is growing interest in assessing the potential of biochar as a soil amendment for agricultural and high-valued horticultural crops in colder regions of the world. This special issue was proposed due to the enthusiastic interest in biochar research that was expressed by participants at the annual meeting of the Canadian Society of Soil Science held in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada from 9 to 13 July 2019. Our goal was to gather the most current findings that would help explain the functions of biochar in cold, temperate soils. In agroecosystems, biochar applications can boost soil nutrient availability while contributing to soil fertility (Gagnon et al. 2022; Li et al. 2022; Abedin and Unc 2022; Lévesque et al. 2022b), and influencing crop productivity (Alotaibi 2022; Hung et al. 2022; Shang et al. 2022). Research also shows that biochar is most effective in improving soil properties when it is combined or co-processed with another soil amendment such as compost, manure, paper mill sludge, or biosolids (Manirakiza et al. 2022; Ziadi et al. 2022; Hangs et al. 2022). Although the majority of biochar research has focused on soil and field crops, there is an emerging body of literature that examines the potential for biochar use in the horticultural industry for both fruit and vegetable production (Messiga et al. 2022a; Shang et al. 2022). The influence of biochar on climate change mitigation and its impact on soil and crop productivity have also been examined (Jiang et al. 2022a, 2022b; Deng et al. 2022; Weber et al. 2022). It has been proposed that biochar is a carbon-negative soil amendment and can be used as a climate change mitigation strategy in temperate agriculture (Lévesque et al. 2022a). The proposed mechanisms for climate change mitigation of biochar are a molecular structure dominated by aromatic carbon blocks that make it more resistant to microbial decomposition, allowing it to persist in soil for thousands of years and potentially curbing greenhouse gas emissions (Messiga et al. 2022a, 2022b; Deng et al. 2022). Biochar physical and chemical properties have become useful in site restoration projects in forest ecosystems and urban soils due to its ability to adsorb and immobilize organic chemicals (Bieser et al. 2022). Manuscripts in this special issue help bridge our current knowledge gap and recognize the contribution of biochar in temperate agricultural soils as a way forward to sustainable crop productivity, healthy soils, and climate change mitigation.
期刊介绍:
The Canadian Journal of Soil Science is an international peer-reviewed journal published in cooperation with the Canadian Society of Soil Science. The journal publishes original research on the use, management, structure and development of soils and draws from the disciplines of soil science, agrometeorology, ecology, agricultural engineering, environmental science, hydrology, forestry, geology, geography and climatology. Research is published in a number of topic sections including: agrometeorology; ecology, biological processes and plant interactions; composition and chemical processes; physical processes and interfaces; genesis, landscape processes and relationships; contamination and environmental stewardship; and management for agricultural, forestry and urban uses.