Effects of Rice Husk Biochar on Carbon Release and Nutrient Availability in Three Cultivation Age of Greenhouse Soils

Greenhouse production can contribute to the accumulation of salt and heavy metals and nutrient imbalance, thus, increasingly degrading greenhouse soils. The potential of rice husk biochar to increase carbon sequestration, neutralize soil pH, increase nutrient retention, and change nutrient/heavy met...

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Main Authors: Chen-Chi Tsai, Yu-Fang Chang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-07-01
Series:Agronomy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/10/7/990
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spelling doaj-676f1df8484e4d91bb9fd1e6c116ed832021-04-02T15:57:49ZengMDPI AGAgronomy2073-43952020-07-011099099010.3390/agronomy10070990Effects of Rice Husk Biochar on Carbon Release and Nutrient Availability in Three Cultivation Age of Greenhouse SoilsChen-Chi Tsai0Yu-Fang Chang1Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, National Ilan University, Ilan 26047, TaiwanDepartment of Forestry and Natural Resources, National Ilan University, Ilan 26047, TaiwanGreenhouse production can contribute to the accumulation of salt and heavy metals and nutrient imbalance, thus, increasingly degrading greenhouse soils. The potential of rice husk biochar to increase carbon sequestration, neutralize soil pH, increase nutrient retention, and change nutrient/heavy metal sorption/desorption in greenhouse soils is promising. Therefore, we investigated three greenhouse soils (red soil) with 3, 14, and 24 cultivation years (3S, 14S, and 24S) in northern Taiwan to test the effects of rice husk biochar (RHB) on carbon dynamics and nutrient availability. A 100-day incubation study was conducted in which poultry-livestock manure compost (2% by wt.) and six rice-husk-based, slow-pyrolysis biochars pyrolyzed at different temperatures were applied (0%, 0.5%, 1.0%, 4.0%, 10%, and 20% by wt.) to three red soils. The study results indicated that the RHB pyrolyzed at high temperatures, with relatively high pH and Ca content, could lead to a higher neutralizing effect when applied to the soil. In addition, the high temperatures pyrolyzed RHB had a higher capacity to reduce the concentration of Cu, Pb, and Zn in the three soils, especially for the younger cultivation soil, which contributed to the higher pH and relatively high surface area of these RHB, and the relative lower soil pH of the younger soil. Furthermore, only adding 0.5% RHB could result in an evident change in soil characteristics for 3S and 24S soil, including cumulative C release, pH, EC, TC, and available K increase, but 4% RHB addition was needed for 14S soil. In the condition of co-application with 2% compost (by wt.), 4% RHB addition was necessary for carbon sequestration, at least 10% RHB addition was needed for 3S and 14S soil, but 1.0 to 4.0% would be sufficient for 24S. In conclusion, the RHB and compost co-application in greenhouse soil resulted in improved chemical properties, and the effect of the pyrolysis temperature, application rate, and cultivation age had varying improvements.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/10/7/990rice husk biochargreenhouse soilcultivation agesoil fertilitycarbon sequestrationheavy metal
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chen-Chi Tsai
Yu-Fang Chang
spellingShingle Chen-Chi Tsai
Yu-Fang Chang
Effects of Rice Husk Biochar on Carbon Release and Nutrient Availability in Three Cultivation Age of Greenhouse Soils
Agronomy
rice husk biochar
greenhouse soil
cultivation age
soil fertility
carbon sequestration
heavy metal
author_facet Chen-Chi Tsai
Yu-Fang Chang
author_sort Chen-Chi Tsai
title Effects of Rice Husk Biochar on Carbon Release and Nutrient Availability in Three Cultivation Age of Greenhouse Soils
title_short Effects of Rice Husk Biochar on Carbon Release and Nutrient Availability in Three Cultivation Age of Greenhouse Soils
title_full Effects of Rice Husk Biochar on Carbon Release and Nutrient Availability in Three Cultivation Age of Greenhouse Soils
title_fullStr Effects of Rice Husk Biochar on Carbon Release and Nutrient Availability in Three Cultivation Age of Greenhouse Soils
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Rice Husk Biochar on Carbon Release and Nutrient Availability in Three Cultivation Age of Greenhouse Soils
title_sort effects of rice husk biochar on carbon release and nutrient availability in three cultivation age of greenhouse soils
publisher MDPI AG
series Agronomy
issn 2073-4395
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Greenhouse production can contribute to the accumulation of salt and heavy metals and nutrient imbalance, thus, increasingly degrading greenhouse soils. The potential of rice husk biochar to increase carbon sequestration, neutralize soil pH, increase nutrient retention, and change nutrient/heavy metal sorption/desorption in greenhouse soils is promising. Therefore, we investigated three greenhouse soils (red soil) with 3, 14, and 24 cultivation years (3S, 14S, and 24S) in northern Taiwan to test the effects of rice husk biochar (RHB) on carbon dynamics and nutrient availability. A 100-day incubation study was conducted in which poultry-livestock manure compost (2% by wt.) and six rice-husk-based, slow-pyrolysis biochars pyrolyzed at different temperatures were applied (0%, 0.5%, 1.0%, 4.0%, 10%, and 20% by wt.) to three red soils. The study results indicated that the RHB pyrolyzed at high temperatures, with relatively high pH and Ca content, could lead to a higher neutralizing effect when applied to the soil. In addition, the high temperatures pyrolyzed RHB had a higher capacity to reduce the concentration of Cu, Pb, and Zn in the three soils, especially for the younger cultivation soil, which contributed to the higher pH and relatively high surface area of these RHB, and the relative lower soil pH of the younger soil. Furthermore, only adding 0.5% RHB could result in an evident change in soil characteristics for 3S and 24S soil, including cumulative C release, pH, EC, TC, and available K increase, but 4% RHB addition was needed for 14S soil. In the condition of co-application with 2% compost (by wt.), 4% RHB addition was necessary for carbon sequestration, at least 10% RHB addition was needed for 3S and 14S soil, but 1.0 to 4.0% would be sufficient for 24S. In conclusion, the RHB and compost co-application in greenhouse soil resulted in improved chemical properties, and the effect of the pyrolysis temperature, application rate, and cultivation age had varying improvements.
topic rice husk biochar
greenhouse soil
cultivation age
soil fertility
carbon sequestration
heavy metal
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/10/7/990
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