Abstract

AbstractBoth biochar and nitrogen (N) addition have been proposed for enhancing plant productivity and increasing carbon (C) sequestration. Although numerous studies have been conducted to examine responses of soil greenhouse gas (GHG) fluxes to biochar or N addition, biochar is often co‐applied with N fertilizer and the interactive effects of the two factors still remain unclear. In this study, we performed a meta‐analysis of manipulative experiments with 267 two‐factor observations to quantify the main and interactive effects of biochar and N addition on soil GHG fluxes at a global scale. Our results showed that biochar addition significantly increased soil CO2 emission by 10.1%, but decreased N2O emission by 14.7%. Meanwhile, N addition increased both soil CO2 and N2O emissions by 11.6% and 288%, respectively. The combination of biochar and N addition also exhibited significant positive effect on CO2 (+18.0%) and N2O (+148%) emissions, but there were non‐significant changes in CH4 fluxes. Consequently, antagonistic interaction between biochar and N addition was observed in soil GHG fluxes and their global warming potential (GWP), except for CH4 uptake showing an additive interaction. This synthesis highlights the importance of the interactive effects between biochar and N addition, providing a quantitative basis to develop sustainable strategies toward widespread application of biochar to preserve cropping system and mitigate climate change.

Highlights

  • The Earth has experienced approximately 0.85°C of elevated temperature relative to the pre-i­ndustrial levels, which was mainly caused by the ever-i­ ncreasing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from anthropogenic activities (IPCC, 2013)

  • The individual effect of biochar, N addition, and the combined two factors was calculated by the response ratio (RR), which was described in the Hedges et al (1999) and Luo et al (2006)

  • We found that the interactive effects of biochar and N addition on soil GHG fluxes were generally antagonistic, rather than additive or synergistic (Figure 2)

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Summary

Funding information

National Natural Science Foundation of China, Grant/Award Number: 31901200, 31930072 and 32001135; China Postdoctoral Science Foundation, Grant/Award Number: 2019M661428; National Key Research and Development Program of China, Grant/Award Number: 2020YFA0608403; Shanghai Sailing Program, Grant/Award Number: 19YF1413300

| INTRODUCTION
| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| RESULTS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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