Illinois Sustainable Technology Center, Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA.
Illinois Sustainable Technology Center, Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA.
Chemosphere. 2019 Aug;228:565-576. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.04.031. Epub 2019 Apr 12.
Biochar has been promoted as a soil amendment that enhances soil quality and agronomic productivity and reduces greenhouse gas production. However, these benefits are not always realized. A major hurdle to the beneficial use of biochar is our limited knowledge regarding the mechanisms directing its effects on soil systems. This project aimed to eliminate some of this uncertainty by examining the biological responses (plant productivity, greenhouse gas production, soil microbial community structure) of a suite of soils (10) to the addition of biochars produced by different processes (pyrolysis, gasification, burning) from a range of feedstocks (corn stalks, hardwood, grass). Results indicated that these three responses were not significantly impacted by the addition of pyrolysis biochars from different feedstocks at 1 and 5% (w/w) addition levels. On the other hand, both an open-air burned corn stalk (5%) and raw corn stalks (1 and 5%) additions did alter the measured soil functionality. For example, the 5% burnt corn stalks addition reduced total above ground plant biomass (∼30%), increased observed NO production by an order of magnitude, and altered soil bacterial community structure. The bacterial groups that increased in relative abundance in the burnt corn stalks-amended soils included families associated with cellulose decomposition (Chitinophagaceae), plant pathogens (Xanthomonadaceae), and biochar/charcoal-amended media (Gemmatimonadetes). In contrast, the abundance of these bacterial groups was not impacted by the pyrolysis biochars. Therefore, this research suggests that pyrolysis biochar represents a stabilized form of carbon that is resistant to microbial mineralization and has negligible effects on soil biological responses.
生物炭已被推广为一种改良土壤的物质,可提高土壤质量和农业生产力,并减少温室气体的产生。然而,这些益处并不总是能够实现。生物炭的有益利用的一个主要障碍是我们对其影响土壤系统的机制的了解有限。本项目旨在通过检查一系列土壤(10 种)对生物炭(由不同原料(玉米秸秆、硬木、草)通过热解、气化、燃烧等不同过程产生)添加的生物学响应(植物生产力、温室气体产生、土壤微生物群落结构),来消除一些不确定性。结果表明,在 1%和 5%(w/w)的添加水平下,不同原料的热解生物炭的添加对这三种响应没有显著影响。另一方面,露天燃烧的玉米秸秆(5%)和生玉米秸秆(1%和 5%)的添加确实改变了测量的土壤功能。例如,5%的燃烧玉米秸秆添加减少了总地上植物生物量(约 30%),使观察到的 NO 产生增加了一个数量级,并改变了土壤细菌群落结构。在燃烧玉米秸秆添加的土壤中相对丰度增加的细菌群包括与纤维素分解(几丁质分解菌科)、植物病原体(黄单胞菌科)和生物炭/炭添加介质(Gemmatimonadetes)相关的家族。相比之下,这些细菌群的丰度不受热解生物炭的影响。因此,本研究表明,热解生物炭代表了一种稳定的碳形式,不易被微生物矿化,对土壤生物响应几乎没有影响。