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The effectiveness of reed-biochar in mitigating phosphorus losses and enhancing microbially-driven phosphorus dynamics in paddy soil.

Authors :
Wang, Yizhe
Zhang, Yuping
Zhao, Hang
Hu, Wang
Zhang, Hanfeng
Zhou, Xuan
Luo, Gongwen
Source :
Journal of Environmental Management. Jul2022, Vol. 314, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Biochar is a promising novel material for mitigating phosphorus (P) loss and enhancing P retention in chemical-amended agricultural soils. However, the optimal application rate for aforesaid effectiveness and potential drivers of the process are not well understood. Herein, a column-based pot experiment was carried out to investigate how and to what extent reed-biochar is effective in positively triggering P loss and availability in paddy soils treated by chemical fertilizer. Compared with chemical-only treatment, the accumulated leakage of total P, dissoluble P, and particulate P in chemical fertilizer coupled with 1–4% reed-biochar treatment decreased by 5.3–13.3%, 8.3–10.4%, and 3.0–15.4%, respectively. The accumulated leakage of total P and dissoluble P in 6–8% rate treatments was increased by 5.6–7.5% and 18.3–32.9%, respectively. Increasing reed-biochar rate from 1% to 8% caused an enhancement in soil total P and available P content and P activation coefficient, and the 4% rate achieved a similar effectiveness to the higher rate. Reed-biochar application increased the abundance and diversty of soil phoD-harboring microbes (P < 0.05), while the increment had little to do with the application rate. Soil phoD-harboring community composition and total C content were the main predictors of the P leaching losses, and meanwhile, the total C content was the dominated predictor of soil P retention and availability. These results suggest that adding 1–4% reed-biochar was more beneficial to mitigate paddy P loss and to enhance soil P availability. This study highlights the importance of understanding how microbial populations mediate P transformation to decipher the biochar-driven improvement of soil P utilization. [Display omitted] • Phosphorus loss and retention of paddy soil were related to reed-biochar addition rate. • 1–4% application rate was more beneficial to reduce P loss and enhance P availability. • Biochar addition notably increased abundance and diversty of phoD-harboring microbes. • Soil phoD community composition and total C content were mian predictors of P leakage. • Soil total C content was a dominated predictor of soil P retention and availability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03014797
Volume :
314
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Environmental Management
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
156779743
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.115087