Abstract

Biochar application to soil has been proposed as a means for reducing soil greenhouse gas emissions and mitigating climate change. The effects, however, of interactions between biochar, moisture and temperature on soil CO2 and N2O emissions, remain poorly understood. Furthermore, the applicability of lab-scale observations to field conditions in diverse agroecosystems remains uncertain. Here we investigate the impact of a mixed wood gasification biochar on CO2 and N2O emissions from loess-derived soils using: (1) controlled laboratory incubations at three moisture (27, 31 and 35%) and three temperature (10, 20 and 30 °C) levels and (2) a field study with four cropping systems (continuous corn, switchgrass, low diversity grass mix and high diversity grass-forb mix). Biochar reduced N2O emissions under specific temperatures and moistures in the laboratory and in the continuous corn cropping system in the field. However, the effect of biochar on N2O emissions was only significant in the field and no effect on cumulative CO2 emissions was observed. Cropping system also had a significant effect in the field study, with soils in grass and grass-forb cropping systems emitting more CO2 and less N2O than corn cropping systems. Observed biochar effects were consistent with previous studies showing that biochar amendments can reduce soil N2O emissions under specific but not all, conditions. The disparity in N2O emission responses at the lab and field scales suggests that laboratory incubation experiments may not reliably predict the impact of biochar at the field scale.

Highlights

  • The production and application of biochar—a carbon-rich material produced during the pyrolysis of biomass—to soil has been proposed as a means for mitigating anthropogenic greenhouse gas (GHG)

  • Among the laboratory-incubated soils and field-scale cropping system soils investigated here, biochar had no significant effect on cumulative soil CO2 emissions but did reduce N2O emissions for a no-till continuous corn cropping system

  • Discussion biochar had no significant effect on cumulative soil CO2 emissions but did reduce N2 O emissions for a no-till continuous corn cropping system

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Summary

Introduction

The production and application of biochar—a carbon-rich material produced during the pyrolysis of biomass—to soil has been proposed as a means for mitigating anthropogenic greenhouse gas (GHG)emissions [1]. The production and application of biochar—a carbon-rich material produced during the pyrolysis of biomass—to soil has been proposed as a means for mitigating anthropogenic greenhouse gas (GHG). The Pyrolysis-Biochar Bioenergy Platform (PBBP) has the potential to mitigate GHG emissions through three primary pathways. Bioenergy produced by PBBP will offset GHG emissions from the burning of fossil fuels and by converting photosynthetic biomass carbon (C) into recalcitrant biochar C. Biochar amendments increase soil quality, potentially increasing net primary productivity and thereby reducing economic pressure to convert native lands to agricultural production [5]. Soil biochar applications may directly reduce GHG emissions from soils. This direct effect, is highly variable and difficult to model, due to:

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