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Biochar Decelerates Soil Organic Nitrogen Cycling but Stimulates Soil Nitrification in a Temperate Arable Field Trial

Biochar production and subsequent soil incorporation could provide carbon farming solutions to global climate change and escalating food demand. There is evidence that biochar amendment causes fundamental changes in soil nutrient cycles, often resulting in marked increases in crop production, partic...

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Autores principales: Prommer, Judith, Wanek, Wolfgang, Hofhansl, Florian, Trojan, Daniela, Offre, Pierre, Urich, Tim, Schleper, Christa, Sassmann, Stefan, Kitzler, Barbara, Soja, Gerhard, Hood-Nowotny, Rebecca Clare
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3907405/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24497947
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0086388
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author Prommer, Judith
Wanek, Wolfgang
Hofhansl, Florian
Trojan, Daniela
Offre, Pierre
Urich, Tim
Schleper, Christa
Sassmann, Stefan
Kitzler, Barbara
Soja, Gerhard
Hood-Nowotny, Rebecca Clare
author_facet Prommer, Judith
Wanek, Wolfgang
Hofhansl, Florian
Trojan, Daniela
Offre, Pierre
Urich, Tim
Schleper, Christa
Sassmann, Stefan
Kitzler, Barbara
Soja, Gerhard
Hood-Nowotny, Rebecca Clare
author_sort Prommer, Judith
collection PubMed
description Biochar production and subsequent soil incorporation could provide carbon farming solutions to global climate change and escalating food demand. There is evidence that biochar amendment causes fundamental changes in soil nutrient cycles, often resulting in marked increases in crop production, particularly in acidic and in infertile soils with low soil organic matter contents, although comparable outcomes in temperate soils are variable. We offer insight into the mechanisms underlying these findings by focusing attention on the soil nitrogen (N) cycle, specifically on hitherto unmeasured processes of organic N cycling in arable soils. We here investigated the impacts of biochar addition on soil organic and inorganic N pools and on gross transformation rates of both pools in a biochar field trial on arable land (Chernozem) in Traismauer, Lower Austria. We found that biochar increased total soil organic carbon but decreased the extractable organic C pool and soil nitrate. While gross rates of organic N transformation processes were reduced by 50–80%, gross N mineralization of organic N was not affected. In contrast, biochar promoted soil ammonia-oxidizer populations (bacterial and archaeal nitrifiers) and accelerated gross nitrification rates more than two-fold. Our findings indicate a de-coupling of the soil organic and inorganic N cycles, with a build-up of organic N, and deceleration of inorganic N release from this pool. The results therefore suggest that addition of inorganic fertilizer-N in combination with biochar could compensate for the reduction in organic N mineralization, with plants and microbes drawing on fertilizer-N for growth, in turn fuelling the belowground build-up of organic N. We conclude that combined addition of biochar with fertilizer-N may increase soil organic N in turn enhancing soil carbon sequestration and thereby could play a fundamental role in future soil management strategies.
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spelling pubmed-39074052014-02-04 Biochar Decelerates Soil Organic Nitrogen Cycling but Stimulates Soil Nitrification in a Temperate Arable Field Trial Prommer, Judith Wanek, Wolfgang Hofhansl, Florian Trojan, Daniela Offre, Pierre Urich, Tim Schleper, Christa Sassmann, Stefan Kitzler, Barbara Soja, Gerhard Hood-Nowotny, Rebecca Clare PLoS One Research Article Biochar production and subsequent soil incorporation could provide carbon farming solutions to global climate change and escalating food demand. There is evidence that biochar amendment causes fundamental changes in soil nutrient cycles, often resulting in marked increases in crop production, particularly in acidic and in infertile soils with low soil organic matter contents, although comparable outcomes in temperate soils are variable. We offer insight into the mechanisms underlying these findings by focusing attention on the soil nitrogen (N) cycle, specifically on hitherto unmeasured processes of organic N cycling in arable soils. We here investigated the impacts of biochar addition on soil organic and inorganic N pools and on gross transformation rates of both pools in a biochar field trial on arable land (Chernozem) in Traismauer, Lower Austria. We found that biochar increased total soil organic carbon but decreased the extractable organic C pool and soil nitrate. While gross rates of organic N transformation processes were reduced by 50–80%, gross N mineralization of organic N was not affected. In contrast, biochar promoted soil ammonia-oxidizer populations (bacterial and archaeal nitrifiers) and accelerated gross nitrification rates more than two-fold. Our findings indicate a de-coupling of the soil organic and inorganic N cycles, with a build-up of organic N, and deceleration of inorganic N release from this pool. The results therefore suggest that addition of inorganic fertilizer-N in combination with biochar could compensate for the reduction in organic N mineralization, with plants and microbes drawing on fertilizer-N for growth, in turn fuelling the belowground build-up of organic N. We conclude that combined addition of biochar with fertilizer-N may increase soil organic N in turn enhancing soil carbon sequestration and thereby could play a fundamental role in future soil management strategies. Public Library of Science 2014-01-30 /pmc/articles/PMC3907405/ /pubmed/24497947 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0086388 Text en © 2014 Prommer et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Prommer, Judith
Wanek, Wolfgang
Hofhansl, Florian
Trojan, Daniela
Offre, Pierre
Urich, Tim
Schleper, Christa
Sassmann, Stefan
Kitzler, Barbara
Soja, Gerhard
Hood-Nowotny, Rebecca Clare
Biochar Decelerates Soil Organic Nitrogen Cycling but Stimulates Soil Nitrification in a Temperate Arable Field Trial
title Biochar Decelerates Soil Organic Nitrogen Cycling but Stimulates Soil Nitrification in a Temperate Arable Field Trial
title_full Biochar Decelerates Soil Organic Nitrogen Cycling but Stimulates Soil Nitrification in a Temperate Arable Field Trial
title_fullStr Biochar Decelerates Soil Organic Nitrogen Cycling but Stimulates Soil Nitrification in a Temperate Arable Field Trial
title_full_unstemmed Biochar Decelerates Soil Organic Nitrogen Cycling but Stimulates Soil Nitrification in a Temperate Arable Field Trial
title_short Biochar Decelerates Soil Organic Nitrogen Cycling but Stimulates Soil Nitrification in a Temperate Arable Field Trial
title_sort biochar decelerates soil organic nitrogen cycling but stimulates soil nitrification in a temperate arable field trial
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3907405/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24497947
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0086388
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