Co-application of biochar and organic amendments on soil greenhouse gas emissions: A meta-analysis

  • Jia Fu
  • , Xuhui Zhou
  • , Yanghui He*
  • , Ruiqiang Liu
  • , Yixian Yao
  • , Guiyao Zhou
  • , Hongyang Chen
  • , Lingyan Zhou
  • , Yuling Fu
  • , Shahla Hosseini Bai
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

25 Scopus citations

Abstract

Biochar has been shown to reduce soil greenhouse gas (GHG) and increase nutrient retention in soil; however, the interaction between biochar and organic amendments on GHG emissions remain largely unclear. In this study, we collected 162 two-factor observations to explore how biochar and organic amendments jointly affect soil GHG emissions. Our results showed that biochar addition significantly increased soil CO2 emission by 8.62 %, but reduced CH4 and N2O emissions by 27.0 % and 23.9 %, respectively. Meanwhile, organic amendments and the co-application with biochar resulted in an increase of global warming potential based on the 100-year time horizon (GWP100) by an average of 18.3 % and 26.1 %. More importantly, the interactive effect of biochar and organic amendments on CO2 emission was antagonistic (the combined effect was weaker than the sum of their individual effects), while additive on CH4 and N2O emissions. Additionally, our results suggested that when biochar is co-applied with organic amendments, soil GHG emissions were largely influenced by soil initial total carbon, soil texture, and biochar feedstocks. Our work highlights the important interactive effects of biochar and organic amendments on soil GHG emissions, and provides new insights for promoting ecosystem sustainability as well as mitigating future climate change.

Original languageEnglish
Article number166171
JournalScience of the Total Environment
Volume897
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Nov 2023

Keywords

  • Biochar
  • Global warming potential
  • Interactive effect
  • Organic amendments
  • Soil greenhouse gas

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