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Biochar prepared at different pyrolysis temperatures affects urea-nitrogen immobilization and N(2)O emissions in paddy fields

BACKGROUND: Food safety has become a major issue, with serious environmental pollution resulting from losses of nitrogen (N) fertilizers. N is a key element for plant growth and is often one of the most important yield-limiting nutrients in paddy soil. Urea-N immobilization is an important process f...

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Autores principales: Gao, Jiping, Zhao, Yanze, Zhang, Wenzhong, Sui, Yanghui, Jin, Dandan, Xin, Wei, Yi, Jun, He, Dawei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6555392/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31198642
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.7027
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author Gao, Jiping
Zhao, Yanze
Zhang, Wenzhong
Sui, Yanghui
Jin, Dandan
Xin, Wei
Yi, Jun
He, Dawei
author_facet Gao, Jiping
Zhao, Yanze
Zhang, Wenzhong
Sui, Yanghui
Jin, Dandan
Xin, Wei
Yi, Jun
He, Dawei
author_sort Gao, Jiping
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Food safety has become a major issue, with serious environmental pollution resulting from losses of nitrogen (N) fertilizers. N is a key element for plant growth and is often one of the most important yield-limiting nutrients in paddy soil. Urea-N immobilization is an important process for restoring the levels of soil nutrient depleted by rice production and sustaining productivity. The benefits of biochar application include improved soil fertility, altered N dynamics, and reduced nutrient leaching. However, due to high variability in the quality of biochar, the responses of N loss and rice productivity to biochar amendments, especially those prepared at different pyrolysis temperatures, are still unclear. The main objectives of the present study were to examine the effects of biochar prepared at different pyrolysis temperatures on fertilizer N immobilization in paddy soil and explore the underlying mechanisms. METHODS: Two biochar samples were prepared by pyrolysis of maize straw at 400 °C (B400) and 700 °C (B700), respectively. The biochar was applied to paddy soil at three rates (0, 0.7, and 2.1%, w/w), with or without N fertilization (0, 168, and 210 kg N ha(–1)). Pot experiments were performed to determine nitrous oxide (N(2)O) emissions and (15)N recovery from paddy soil using a (15)N tracer across the rice growing season. RESULTS: Compared with the non-biochar control, biochar significantly decreased soil bulk density while increasing soil porosity, irrespective of pyrolysis temperature and N fertilizer level. Under B400 and B700, a high biochar rate decreased N loss rate to 66.42 and 68.90%, whereas a high N level increased it to 77.21 and 76.99%, respectively. Biochar also markedly decreased N(2)O emissions to 1.06 (B400) and 0.75 kg ha(−1) (B700); low-N treatment caused a decrease in N(2)O emissions under B400, but this decrease was not observed under B700. An application rate of biochar of 2.1% plus 210 kg ha(−1) N fertilizer substantially decreased the N fertilizer-induced N(2)O emission factor under B400, whereas under B700 no significant difference was observed. Biochar combined with N fertilizer treatment decreased rice biomass and grain yield by an average of 51.55 and 23.90 g pot(–1), respectively, but the yield reduction under B700 was lower than under B400. CONCLUSION: Irrespective of pyrolysis temperature, biochar had a positive effect on residual soil (15)N content, while it negatively affected the (15)N recovery of rice, N(2)O emissions from soil, rice biomass, and grain yield in the first year. Generally, a high application rate of biochar prepared at high or low pyrolysis temperature reduced the N fertilizer-induced N(2)O emission factor considerably. These biochar effects were dependent on N fertilizer level, biochar application rate, and their interactions.
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spelling pubmed-65553922019-06-13 Biochar prepared at different pyrolysis temperatures affects urea-nitrogen immobilization and N(2)O emissions in paddy fields Gao, Jiping Zhao, Yanze Zhang, Wenzhong Sui, Yanghui Jin, Dandan Xin, Wei Yi, Jun He, Dawei PeerJ Agricultural Science BACKGROUND: Food safety has become a major issue, with serious environmental pollution resulting from losses of nitrogen (N) fertilizers. N is a key element for plant growth and is often one of the most important yield-limiting nutrients in paddy soil. Urea-N immobilization is an important process for restoring the levels of soil nutrient depleted by rice production and sustaining productivity. The benefits of biochar application include improved soil fertility, altered N dynamics, and reduced nutrient leaching. However, due to high variability in the quality of biochar, the responses of N loss and rice productivity to biochar amendments, especially those prepared at different pyrolysis temperatures, are still unclear. The main objectives of the present study were to examine the effects of biochar prepared at different pyrolysis temperatures on fertilizer N immobilization in paddy soil and explore the underlying mechanisms. METHODS: Two biochar samples were prepared by pyrolysis of maize straw at 400 °C (B400) and 700 °C (B700), respectively. The biochar was applied to paddy soil at three rates (0, 0.7, and 2.1%, w/w), with or without N fertilization (0, 168, and 210 kg N ha(–1)). Pot experiments were performed to determine nitrous oxide (N(2)O) emissions and (15)N recovery from paddy soil using a (15)N tracer across the rice growing season. RESULTS: Compared with the non-biochar control, biochar significantly decreased soil bulk density while increasing soil porosity, irrespective of pyrolysis temperature and N fertilizer level. Under B400 and B700, a high biochar rate decreased N loss rate to 66.42 and 68.90%, whereas a high N level increased it to 77.21 and 76.99%, respectively. Biochar also markedly decreased N(2)O emissions to 1.06 (B400) and 0.75 kg ha(−1) (B700); low-N treatment caused a decrease in N(2)O emissions under B400, but this decrease was not observed under B700. An application rate of biochar of 2.1% plus 210 kg ha(−1) N fertilizer substantially decreased the N fertilizer-induced N(2)O emission factor under B400, whereas under B700 no significant difference was observed. Biochar combined with N fertilizer treatment decreased rice biomass and grain yield by an average of 51.55 and 23.90 g pot(–1), respectively, but the yield reduction under B700 was lower than under B400. CONCLUSION: Irrespective of pyrolysis temperature, biochar had a positive effect on residual soil (15)N content, while it negatively affected the (15)N recovery of rice, N(2)O emissions from soil, rice biomass, and grain yield in the first year. Generally, a high application rate of biochar prepared at high or low pyrolysis temperature reduced the N fertilizer-induced N(2)O emission factor considerably. These biochar effects were dependent on N fertilizer level, biochar application rate, and their interactions. PeerJ Inc. 2019-06-04 /pmc/articles/PMC6555392/ /pubmed/31198642 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.7027 Text en ©2019 Gao 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Agricultural Science
Gao, Jiping
Zhao, Yanze
Zhang, Wenzhong
Sui, Yanghui
Jin, Dandan
Xin, Wei
Yi, Jun
He, Dawei
Biochar prepared at different pyrolysis temperatures affects urea-nitrogen immobilization and N(2)O emissions in paddy fields
title Biochar prepared at different pyrolysis temperatures affects urea-nitrogen immobilization and N(2)O emissions in paddy fields
title_full Biochar prepared at different pyrolysis temperatures affects urea-nitrogen immobilization and N(2)O emissions in paddy fields
title_fullStr Biochar prepared at different pyrolysis temperatures affects urea-nitrogen immobilization and N(2)O emissions in paddy fields
title_full_unstemmed Biochar prepared at different pyrolysis temperatures affects urea-nitrogen immobilization and N(2)O emissions in paddy fields
title_short Biochar prepared at different pyrolysis temperatures affects urea-nitrogen immobilization and N(2)O emissions in paddy fields
title_sort biochar prepared at different pyrolysis temperatures affects urea-nitrogen immobilization and n(2)o emissions in paddy fields
topic Agricultural Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6555392/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31198642
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.7027
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