Cargando…

Biochar from Sugarcane Filtercake Reduces Soil CO(2) Emissions Relative to Raw Residue and Improves Water Retention and Nutrient Availability in a Highly-Weathered Tropical Soil

In Brazil, the degradation of nutrient-poor Ferralsols limits productivity and drives agricultural expansion into pristine areas. However, returning agricultural residues to the soil in a stabilized form may offer opportunities for maintaining or improving soil quality, even under conditions that ty...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Eykelbosh, Angela Joy, Johnson, Mark S., Santos de Queiroz, Edmar, Dalmagro, Higo José, Guimarães Couto, Eduardo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4045802/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24897522
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098523
_version_ 1782319383867031552
author Eykelbosh, Angela Joy
Johnson, Mark S.
Santos de Queiroz, Edmar
Dalmagro, Higo José
Guimarães Couto, Eduardo
author_facet Eykelbosh, Angela Joy
Johnson, Mark S.
Santos de Queiroz, Edmar
Dalmagro, Higo José
Guimarães Couto, Eduardo
author_sort Eykelbosh, Angela Joy
collection PubMed
description In Brazil, the degradation of nutrient-poor Ferralsols limits productivity and drives agricultural expansion into pristine areas. However, returning agricultural residues to the soil in a stabilized form may offer opportunities for maintaining or improving soil quality, even under conditions that typically promote carbon loss. We examined the use of biochar made from filtercake (a byproduct of sugarcane processing) on the physicochemical properties of a cultivated tropical soil. Filtercake was pyrolyzed at 575°C for 3 h yielding a biochar with increased surface area and porosity compared to the raw filtercake. Filtercake biochar was primarily composed of aromatic carbon, with some residual cellulose and hemicellulose. In a three-week laboratory incubation, CO(2) effluxes from a highly weathered Ferralsol soil amended with 5% biochar (dry weight, d.w.) were roughly four-fold higher than the soil-only control, but 23-fold lower than CO(2) effluxes from soil amended with 5% (d.w.) raw filtercake. We also applied vinasse, a carbon-rich liquid waste from bioethanol production typically utilized as a fertilizer on sugarcane soils, to filtercake- and biochar-amended soils. Total CO(2) efflux from the biochar-amended soil in response to vinasse application was only 5% of the efflux when vinasse was applied to soil amended with raw filtercake. Furthermore, mixtures of 5 or 10% biochar (d.w.) in this highly weathered tropical soil significantly increased water retention within the plant-available range and also improved nutrient availability. Accordingly, application of sugarcane filtercake as biochar, with or without vinasse application, may better satisfy soil management objectives than filtercake applied to soils in its raw form, and may help to build soil carbon stocks in sugarcane-cultivating regions.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4045802
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2014
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-40458022014-06-09 Biochar from Sugarcane Filtercake Reduces Soil CO(2) Emissions Relative to Raw Residue and Improves Water Retention and Nutrient Availability in a Highly-Weathered Tropical Soil Eykelbosh, Angela Joy Johnson, Mark S. Santos de Queiroz, Edmar Dalmagro, Higo José Guimarães Couto, Eduardo PLoS One Research Article In Brazil, the degradation of nutrient-poor Ferralsols limits productivity and drives agricultural expansion into pristine areas. However, returning agricultural residues to the soil in a stabilized form may offer opportunities for maintaining or improving soil quality, even under conditions that typically promote carbon loss. We examined the use of biochar made from filtercake (a byproduct of sugarcane processing) on the physicochemical properties of a cultivated tropical soil. Filtercake was pyrolyzed at 575°C for 3 h yielding a biochar with increased surface area and porosity compared to the raw filtercake. Filtercake biochar was primarily composed of aromatic carbon, with some residual cellulose and hemicellulose. In a three-week laboratory incubation, CO(2) effluxes from a highly weathered Ferralsol soil amended with 5% biochar (dry weight, d.w.) were roughly four-fold higher than the soil-only control, but 23-fold lower than CO(2) effluxes from soil amended with 5% (d.w.) raw filtercake. We also applied vinasse, a carbon-rich liquid waste from bioethanol production typically utilized as a fertilizer on sugarcane soils, to filtercake- and biochar-amended soils. Total CO(2) efflux from the biochar-amended soil in response to vinasse application was only 5% of the efflux when vinasse was applied to soil amended with raw filtercake. Furthermore, mixtures of 5 or 10% biochar (d.w.) in this highly weathered tropical soil significantly increased water retention within the plant-available range and also improved nutrient availability. Accordingly, application of sugarcane filtercake as biochar, with or without vinasse application, may better satisfy soil management objectives than filtercake applied to soils in its raw form, and may help to build soil carbon stocks in sugarcane-cultivating regions. Public Library of Science 2014-06-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4045802/ /pubmed/24897522 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098523 Text en © 2014 Eykelbosh 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
Eykelbosh, Angela Joy
Johnson, Mark S.
Santos de Queiroz, Edmar
Dalmagro, Higo José
Guimarães Couto, Eduardo
Biochar from Sugarcane Filtercake Reduces Soil CO(2) Emissions Relative to Raw Residue and Improves Water Retention and Nutrient Availability in a Highly-Weathered Tropical Soil
title Biochar from Sugarcane Filtercake Reduces Soil CO(2) Emissions Relative to Raw Residue and Improves Water Retention and Nutrient Availability in a Highly-Weathered Tropical Soil
title_full Biochar from Sugarcane Filtercake Reduces Soil CO(2) Emissions Relative to Raw Residue and Improves Water Retention and Nutrient Availability in a Highly-Weathered Tropical Soil
title_fullStr Biochar from Sugarcane Filtercake Reduces Soil CO(2) Emissions Relative to Raw Residue and Improves Water Retention and Nutrient Availability in a Highly-Weathered Tropical Soil
title_full_unstemmed Biochar from Sugarcane Filtercake Reduces Soil CO(2) Emissions Relative to Raw Residue and Improves Water Retention and Nutrient Availability in a Highly-Weathered Tropical Soil
title_short Biochar from Sugarcane Filtercake Reduces Soil CO(2) Emissions Relative to Raw Residue and Improves Water Retention and Nutrient Availability in a Highly-Weathered Tropical Soil
title_sort biochar from sugarcane filtercake reduces soil co(2) emissions relative to raw residue and improves water retention and nutrient availability in a highly-weathered tropical soil
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4045802/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24897522
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0098523
work_keys_str_mv AT eykelboshangelajoy biocharfromsugarcanefiltercakereducessoilco2emissionsrelativetorawresidueandimproveswaterretentionandnutrientavailabilityinahighlyweatheredtropicalsoil
AT johnsonmarks biocharfromsugarcanefiltercakereducessoilco2emissionsrelativetorawresidueandimproveswaterretentionandnutrientavailabilityinahighlyweatheredtropicalsoil
AT santosdequeirozedmar biocharfromsugarcanefiltercakereducessoilco2emissionsrelativetorawresidueandimproveswaterretentionandnutrientavailabilityinahighlyweatheredtropicalsoil
AT dalmagrohigojose biocharfromsugarcanefiltercakereducessoilco2emissionsrelativetorawresidueandimproveswaterretentionandnutrientavailabilityinahighlyweatheredtropicalsoil
AT guimaraescoutoeduardo biocharfromsugarcanefiltercakereducessoilco2emissionsrelativetorawresidueandimproveswaterretentionandnutrientavailabilityinahighlyweatheredtropicalsoil