Abstract

Biochar (or pyrogenic organic matter) is increasingly proposed as a soil amendment for improving fertility, carbon sequestration and reduction of greenhouse gas emissions. However, little is known about its effects on aggregation, an important indicator of soil quality and functioning. The aim of this study was to assess the effect of Eucalyptus wood biochar (B, pyrolyzed at 550°C, at 0 or 2.5tha−1), green manure (T, from Tithonia diversifolia at 0, 2.5 or 5.0tha−1) and mineral nitrogen (U, urea, at 0, or 120kgNha−1) on soil respiration, aggregate size distribution and SOC in these aggregate size fractions in a 2-year field experiment on a low-fertility Ultisol in western Kenya under conventional hand-hoe tillage. Air-dry 2-mm sieved soils were divided into four fractions by wet sieving: Large Macro-aggregates (LM; >1000μm); Small Macro-aggregates (SM, 250–1000μm); Micro-aggregates (M, 250–53μm) and Silt+Clay (S+C, <53μm). We found that biochar alone did not affect a mean weight diameter (MWD) but combined application with either T. diversifolia (BT) or urea (BU) increased MWD by 34±5.2μm (8%) and 55±5.4μm (13%), respectively, compared to the control (P=0.023; n=36). The B+T+U combination increased the proportion of the LM and SM by 7.0±0.8%, but reduced the S+C fraction by 5.2±0.23%. SOC was 30%, 25% and 23% in S+C,M and LM/SM fractions, and increased by 9.6±1.0, 5.7±0.8, 6.3±1.1 and 4.2±0.9gkg−1 for LM, SM, M and S+C, respectively. MWD was not related to either soil respiration or soil moisture but decreased with higher SOC (R2=0.37, P=0.014, n=26) and increased with greater biomass production (R2=0.11, P=0.045, n=33). Our data suggest that within the timeframe of the study, biochar is stored predominantly as free particulate OC in the silt and clay fraction and promoted a movement of native SOC from larger-size aggregates to the smaller-sized fraction in the short-term (2 years).

Highlights

  • Biochar has shown promise for contributing to the triple benefit of improving soil productivity (Biederman and Harpole, 2013; Qian et al, 2015), sequestering soil carbon (Lehmann, 2007; Schneider et al, 2011; Lorenz and Lal, 2014) and reducing an emission of greenhouse gasses (i.e. CO2, CH4 and N2O) in agricultural soils (Cayuela et al, 2013; Fungo et al, 2014)

  • We found that biochar alone did not affect a mean weight diameter (MWD) but combined application with either T. diversifolia (BT) or urea (BU) increased MWD by 34 Æ 5.2 mm (8%) and 55 Æ 5.4 mm (13%), respectively, compared to the control (P = 0.023; n = 36)

  • The biochar addition had no effect on MWD, but the combination of biochar with either Tithonia (B2.5 + T2.5/5) or urea (B2.5 + U120) significantly increased MWD by 34 Æ 5.2 mm (8%) and 55 Æ 5.4 mm ($13%), respectively compared to the control

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Summary

Introduction

Biochar (pyrogenic organic matter) has shown promise for contributing to the triple benefit of improving soil productivity (Biederman and Harpole, 2013; Qian et al, 2015), sequestering soil carbon (Lehmann, 2007; Schneider et al, 2011; Lorenz and Lal, 2014) and reducing an emission of greenhouse gasses (i.e. CO2, CH4 and N2O) in agricultural soils (Cayuela et al, 2013; Fungo et al, 2014). The rate and scale of soil organic matter (SOM) turnover following biochar amendment depends on complex associations among biochar as well as soil properties (pH, native SOM, texture, mineralogy), agro-ecological conditions (precipitation and temperature), and management interventions such as use of manure and mineral fertilizers, tillage and irrigation. Fungo et al / Soil & Tillage Research 165 (2017) 190–197

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