Title of article :
Short term soil priming effects and the mineralisation of biochar following its incorporation to soils of different pH
Author/Authors :
Luo، نويسنده , , Y. and Durenkamp، نويسنده , , M. and De Nobili، نويسنده , , M. and Lin، نويسنده , , Q. and Brookes، نويسنده , , P.C.، نويسنده ,
Pages :
11
From page :
2304
To page :
2314
Abstract :
The aim of this work was to determine the magnitude of the priming effect, i.e. short-term changes in the rate (negative or positive) of mineralisation of native soil organic carbon (C), following addition of biochars. The biochars were made from Miscanthus giganteus, a C4 plant, naturally enriched with 13C. The biochars were produced at 350 °C (biochar350) and 700 °C (biochar700) and applied with and without ryegrass as a substrate to a clay-loam soil at pH 3.7 and 7.6. A secondary aim was to determine the effect of ryegrass addition on the mineralisation of the two biochars. 87 days, biochar350 addition caused priming effects equivalent to 250 and 319 μg CO2–C g−1 soil, in the low and high pH soil, respectively. The largest priming effects occurred at the start of the incubations. The size of the priming effect was decreased at higher biochar pyrolysis temperatures, which may be a way of controlling priming effects following biochar incorporation to soil, if desired. The priming effect was probably induced by the water soluble components of the biochar. At 87 days of incubation, 0.14% and 0.18% of biochar700 and 0.61% and 0.84% of biochar350 were mineralized in the low and high pH soil, respectively. Ryegrass addition gave an increased biochar350 mineralisation of 33% and 40%, and increased biochar700 at 137% and 70%, in the low and high pH soils, respectively. Certainly, on the basis of our results, if biochar is used to sequester carbon a priming effect may occur, increasing CO2–C evolved from soil and decreasing soil organic C. However, this will be more than compensated for by the increased soil C caused by biochar incorporation. A similar conclusion holds for accelerated mineralisation of biochar due to incorporation of fresh labile substrates. We consider that our results are the first to unequivocally demonstrate the initiation, progress and termination of a true positive priming effect by biochar on native soil organic C.
Keywords :
Biochar , CO2 evolution , Priming effect , Pyrolysis temperatures , Ryegrass , Soil microbial biomass , Soil organic carbon , Biochar decomposition
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics
Record number :
1999439
Link To Document :
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