Abstract

Biochar may have beneficial effects on soil depending on its properties and pedoclimatic conditions. Highly sloping soils are prone to erosion and organic matter depletion, and biochar can be useful to restore soil fertility and quality, and crop yields. To test the effect of wood gasification biochar (WGB), we conducted a field experiment applying 0 and 60 Mg ha−1 of WGB only (no fertilizer) to a sub-alkaline and fine-textured soil under Mediterranean climate conditions. The effect of WGB on the soil physicochemical properties and on 12 enzyme activities involved in the C, N, P, and S cycles was monitored during a wheat-growing season along with its effect on grain yield. The results show that WGB was rather recalcitrant, and the application of a high dose of it had no effect on most of the soil physicochemical properties, enzyme activities and wheat grain yield. Since enzyme activities involved in the C cycle were similar in WGB-treated and not-treated soils, WGB failed to stimulate organic matter mineralization during the monitored period, with no contribution to N and P supply. Since WGB can contribute to soil C stock with no detrimental effects on wheat yield, wood gasification can allow recycling waste woody materials of urban origin to produce energy and return biochar back to agricultural soils. We suggest that future studies on WGB focus on the effect of its aging in soil on soil physicochemical and biochemical properties, and on crop performances.

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