International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, Natural Resource Management Unit, c/o ICIPE, KISE Road, P.O. Box 30772-00100, Nairobi, Kenya.
Institute of Soil Research, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Peter-Jordan-Straße 82, Vienna, 1190, Austria.
Ecol Appl. 2019 Dec;29(8):e01984. doi: 10.1002/eap.1984. Epub 2019 Aug 30.
Increasing organic matter/carbon contents of soils is one option proposed to offset climate change inducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, under the auspices of the UNFCC Paris Agreement. One of the complementary practices to sequester carbon in soils on decadal time scales is amending it with biochar, a carbon rich byproduct of biomass gasification. In sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), there is a widespread and close interplay of agrarian-based economies and the use of biomass for fuel, which makes the co-benefits of biochar production for agriculture and energy supply explicitly different from the rest of the world. To date, the quantities of residues available from staple crops for biochar production, and their potential for carbon sequestration in farming systems of SSA have not been comprehensively investigated. We assessed the productivity and usage of biomass waste from maize, sorghum, rice, millet, and groundnut crops; specifically quantifying straw, shanks, chaff, and shells, based on measurements from multiple farmer fields and household surveys in eastern Uganda. Moreover, allometric models were tested, using grain productivity, plant height, and density as predictors. These models enable rapid and low-cost assessment of the potential availability of feedstocks at various spatial scales: individual cropland, farm enterprise, region, and country. Ultimately, we modeled the carbon balance in soils of major cropping systems when amended with biochar from biomass residues, and up-scaled this for basic scenario analysis. This interdisciplinary approach showcases that there is significant biophysical potential for soil carbon sequestration in farming systems of Uganda through amendment of biochar derived from unused residues of cereals and legume crops. Furthermore, information about these biomass waste flows is used for estimating the rates of biochar input that could be made to farmlands, as well as the amounts of energy that could be produced with gasifier appliances.
增加土壤中的有机质/碳含量是《联合国气候变化框架公约》巴黎协定提出的一种抵消气候变化引起的温室气体(GHG)排放的选择。在数十年的时间尺度上,将碳固定在土壤中的一种补充做法是用生物炭来改良土壤,生物炭是生物质气化的富碳副产品。在撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA),以农业为基础的经济与生物质燃料的使用广泛且紧密交织,这使得生物炭生产对农业和能源供应的协同效益与世界其他地区明显不同。迄今为止,尚未全面研究来自主要农作物的残渣用于生物炭生产的数量及其在 SSA 农业系统中固碳的潜力。我们评估了玉米、高粱、水稻、小米和花生作物的生物质废物的生产力和用途;具体来说,根据乌干达东部多个农民田间和家庭调查的数据,量化了秸秆、秸秆、糠秕和壳。此外,还测试了基于谷物生产力、植物高度和密度作为预测因子的比例模型。这些模型能够在不同的空间尺度上快速、低成本地评估各种原料的潜在可用性:单个农田、农场企业、地区和国家。最终,我们模拟了用生物质残渣制成的生物炭对主要种植系统土壤的碳平衡,并将其扩展到基本情景分析。这种跨学科方法展示了通过对谷物和豆类作物未使用的残余物进行生物炭改良,乌干达的农业系统在土壤碳固存方面具有重要的生物物理潜力。此外,这些生物质废料流动的信息还用于估计可以输入农田的生物炭的速率,以及可以用气化设备生产的能量数量。