Abstract

Biochar has been reported to reduce emission of nitrous oxide (N2O) from soils, but the mechanisms responsible remain fragmentary. For example, it is unclear how biochar effects on N2O emissions are mediated through biochar effects on soil gross N turnover rates. Hence, we conducted an incubation study with three contrasting agricultural soils from Kenya (an Acrisol cultivated for 10-years (Acrisol10); an Acrisol cultivated for over 100-years (Acrisol100); a Ferralsol cultivated for over 100 years (Ferralsol)). The soils were amended with biochar at either 2% or 4% w/w. The 15N pool dilution technique was used to quantify gross N mineralization and nitrification and microbial consumption of extractable N over a 20-day incubation period at 25 °C and 70% water holding capacity of the soil, accompanied by N2O emissions measurements. Direct measurements of N2 emissions were conducted using the helium gas flow soil core method. N2O emissions varied across soils with higher emissions in Acrisols than in Ferralsols. Addition of 2% biochar reduced N2O emissions in all soils by 53 to 78% with no significant further reduction induced by addition at 4%. Biochar effects on soil nitrate concentrations were highly variable across soils, ranging from a reduction, no effect and an increase. Biochar addition stimulated gross N mineralization in Acrisol-10 and Acrisol-100 soils at both addition rates with no effect observed for the Ferralsol. In contrast, gross nitrification was stimulated in only one soil but only at a 4% application rate. Also, biochar effects on increased NH4+ immobilization and NO3−consumption strongly varied across the three investigated soils. The variable and bidirectional biochar effects on gross N turnover in conjunction with the unambiguous and consistent reduction of N2O emissions suggested that the inhibiting effect of biochar on soil N2O emission seemed to be decoupled from gross microbial N turnover processes. With biochar application, N2 emissions were about an order of magnitude higher for Acrisol-10 soils compared to Acrisol-100 and Ferralsol-100 soils. Our N2O and N2 flux data thus support an explanation of direct promotion of gross N2O reduction by biochar rather than effects on soil extractable N dynamics. Effects of biochar on soil extractable N and gross N turnover, however, might be highly variable across different soils as found here for three typical agricultural soils of Kenya.

Highlights

  • Nitrous oxide (N2O) is a potent Long-Lived Greenhouse Gas (LLGHG), and involved in the destruction of stratospheric ozone (Ciais et al, 2013)

  • Agricultural soils are an important source of atmospheric N2O, with denitrification representing the single most important biochemical process releasing N2O into the atmosphere (Butterbach-Bahl and Dannenmann, 2011; Harter et al, 2014a, 2014b)

  • Though biochar effects on gross N turnover were variable across soils and biochar addition rate, we observed a remarkably strong stimulation of gross ammonification by a factor of 3–6 induced by biochar addition in the Ferralsol and a stimulation of gross nitrification in the Acrisol10 soil by 70% at least under 4% addition

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Summary

Introduction

Nitrous oxide (N2O) is a potent Long-Lived Greenhouse Gas (LLGHG), and involved in the destruction of stratospheric ozone (Ciais et al, 2013). Measures for reducing N2O emission from agricultural soils such as biochar addition are increasingly considered to mitigate the impact of agriculture on climate change. Yanai et al (2007) suggested that a pH increase resulting from biochar addition could enhance N2O reductase activity, thereby increasing the reduction of N2O to N2in the last step of denitrification. Case et al (2015) found that the suppression of soil N2O emissions was not due to limitations of inorganic N availability in the soil caused by biochar-induced inorganic N immobilization. Direct impacts of biochar on the activity of mineralizing and nitrifying microbes (Lehmann et al, 2011) may occur but have, so far, hardly been investigated

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