Biochar Amendment Increases C and N Retention in the Soil-Plant Systems: Its Implications in Enhancing Plant Growth and Water-Use Efficiency Under Reduced Irrigation Regimes of Maize (Zea mays L.)

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Biochar Amendment Increases C and N Retention in the Soil-Plant Systems : Its Implications in Enhancing Plant Growth and Water-Use Efficiency Under Reduced Irrigation Regimes of Maize (Zea mays L.). / Wan, Heng; Chen, Yiting; Cui, Bingjing; Liu, Xuezhi; Hou, Jingxiang; Wei, Zhenhua; Liu, Jie; Liu, Fulai.

In: Journal of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition, Vol. 23, 2023, p. 1576-1588.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Wan, H, Chen, Y, Cui, B, Liu, X, Hou, J, Wei, Z, Liu, J & Liu, F 2023, 'Biochar Amendment Increases C and N Retention in the Soil-Plant Systems: Its Implications in Enhancing Plant Growth and Water-Use Efficiency Under Reduced Irrigation Regimes of Maize (Zea mays L.)', Journal of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition, vol. 23, pp. 1576-1588. https://doi.org/10.1007/s42729-023-01223-5

APA

Wan, H., Chen, Y., Cui, B., Liu, X., Hou, J., Wei, Z., Liu, J., & Liu, F. (2023). Biochar Amendment Increases C and N Retention in the Soil-Plant Systems: Its Implications in Enhancing Plant Growth and Water-Use Efficiency Under Reduced Irrigation Regimes of Maize (Zea mays L.). Journal of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition, 23, 1576-1588. https://doi.org/10.1007/s42729-023-01223-5

Vancouver

Wan H, Chen Y, Cui B, Liu X, Hou J, Wei Z et al. Biochar Amendment Increases C and N Retention in the Soil-Plant Systems: Its Implications in Enhancing Plant Growth and Water-Use Efficiency Under Reduced Irrigation Regimes of Maize (Zea mays L.). Journal of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition. 2023;23:1576-1588. https://doi.org/10.1007/s42729-023-01223-5

Author

Wan, Heng ; Chen, Yiting ; Cui, Bingjing ; Liu, Xuezhi ; Hou, Jingxiang ; Wei, Zhenhua ; Liu, Jie ; Liu, Fulai. / Biochar Amendment Increases C and N Retention in the Soil-Plant Systems : Its Implications in Enhancing Plant Growth and Water-Use Efficiency Under Reduced Irrigation Regimes of Maize (Zea mays L.). In: Journal of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition. 2023 ; Vol. 23. pp. 1576-1588.

Bibtex

@article{7e87f91a2cd14cca9dc8dcacb24c4632,
title = "Biochar Amendment Increases C and N Retention in the Soil-Plant Systems: Its Implications in Enhancing Plant Growth and Water-Use Efficiency Under Reduced Irrigation Regimes of Maize (Zea mays L.)",
abstract = "Biochar influences soil biophysicochemical processes and nutrient availability, yet the effects of different biochar and soil water dynamics on carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) retention in the soil-plant systems remain unknown. Maize plants were grown in split-root pots filled with clay loam soil amended with wheat straw pellet biochar (WSP) and softwood pellet biochar (SWP) at 2% (w/w) and were either irrigated daily to 90% of water-holding capacity (FI) or irrigated with 70% volume of water used for FI to the whole root-zone (DI) or alternately to half root-zone (PRD) from the fourth leaf to grain-filling stage. Compared to the unamended controls, biochar amendment enhanced plant biomass and water-use efficiency, particularly when combined with PRD. Although the WSP amendment tended to decrease soil net N mineralization rate, it significantly increased C and N retention in the soil-plant systems. Compared to DI, PRD significantly increased soil respiration rate while lowering soil total organic C content. Moreover, PRD increased soil inorganic N content, which might be related to increased mineralization of soil organic C (SOC) and soil organic N (SON). Such effects might implicate that PRD outperformed DI in enhancing the mineralization of soil organic matter. Although PRD alone might not be a sustainable irrigation method because of greater C and N losses, biochar addition could alleviate these undesirable effects via depressing SOC and SON mineralization. Biochar amendment, especially WSP combined with PRD, could be a promising practice to increase maize growth and water-use efficiency while sustaining C and N retention in the soil-plant systems.Highlightscenter dot Effects of biochar addition and irrigation regimes on C and N retention in the soil-plant systems of maize were investigated.center dot Biochar increased plant N retention and maize growth. Partial root-zone drying (PRD) irrigation increased soil respiration rate and soil organic C and N mineralization.center dot Biochar addition combined with PRD improved maize growth, water-use efficiency, and sustained C and N retention in the soil-plant systems.",
keywords = "Biochar, Drying/wetting cycles, C and N retention, Isotope composition, Mineralization, GREENHOUSE-GAS EMISSIONS, NITROGEN-RETENTION, MICROBIAL ACTIVITY, MYCORRHIZAL FUNGI, NATURAL-ABUNDANCE, CARBON, IMPACT, YIELD, NUTRITION, ISOTOPES",
author = "Heng Wan and Yiting Chen and Bingjing Cui and Xuezhi Liu and Jingxiang Hou and Zhenhua Wei and Jie Liu and Fulai Liu",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1007/s42729-023-01223-5",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
pages = "1576--1588",
journal = "Journal of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition",
issn = "0718-9516",
publisher = "Sociedad Chilena de la Ciencia del Suelo",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Biochar Amendment Increases C and N Retention in the Soil-Plant Systems

T2 - Its Implications in Enhancing Plant Growth and Water-Use Efficiency Under Reduced Irrigation Regimes of Maize (Zea mays L.)

AU - Wan, Heng

AU - Chen, Yiting

AU - Cui, Bingjing

AU - Liu, Xuezhi

AU - Hou, Jingxiang

AU - Wei, Zhenhua

AU - Liu, Jie

AU - Liu, Fulai

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Biochar influences soil biophysicochemical processes and nutrient availability, yet the effects of different biochar and soil water dynamics on carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) retention in the soil-plant systems remain unknown. Maize plants were grown in split-root pots filled with clay loam soil amended with wheat straw pellet biochar (WSP) and softwood pellet biochar (SWP) at 2% (w/w) and were either irrigated daily to 90% of water-holding capacity (FI) or irrigated with 70% volume of water used for FI to the whole root-zone (DI) or alternately to half root-zone (PRD) from the fourth leaf to grain-filling stage. Compared to the unamended controls, biochar amendment enhanced plant biomass and water-use efficiency, particularly when combined with PRD. Although the WSP amendment tended to decrease soil net N mineralization rate, it significantly increased C and N retention in the soil-plant systems. Compared to DI, PRD significantly increased soil respiration rate while lowering soil total organic C content. Moreover, PRD increased soil inorganic N content, which might be related to increased mineralization of soil organic C (SOC) and soil organic N (SON). Such effects might implicate that PRD outperformed DI in enhancing the mineralization of soil organic matter. Although PRD alone might not be a sustainable irrigation method because of greater C and N losses, biochar addition could alleviate these undesirable effects via depressing SOC and SON mineralization. Biochar amendment, especially WSP combined with PRD, could be a promising practice to increase maize growth and water-use efficiency while sustaining C and N retention in the soil-plant systems.Highlightscenter dot Effects of biochar addition and irrigation regimes on C and N retention in the soil-plant systems of maize were investigated.center dot Biochar increased plant N retention and maize growth. Partial root-zone drying (PRD) irrigation increased soil respiration rate and soil organic C and N mineralization.center dot Biochar addition combined with PRD improved maize growth, water-use efficiency, and sustained C and N retention in the soil-plant systems.

AB - Biochar influences soil biophysicochemical processes and nutrient availability, yet the effects of different biochar and soil water dynamics on carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) retention in the soil-plant systems remain unknown. Maize plants were grown in split-root pots filled with clay loam soil amended with wheat straw pellet biochar (WSP) and softwood pellet biochar (SWP) at 2% (w/w) and were either irrigated daily to 90% of water-holding capacity (FI) or irrigated with 70% volume of water used for FI to the whole root-zone (DI) or alternately to half root-zone (PRD) from the fourth leaf to grain-filling stage. Compared to the unamended controls, biochar amendment enhanced plant biomass and water-use efficiency, particularly when combined with PRD. Although the WSP amendment tended to decrease soil net N mineralization rate, it significantly increased C and N retention in the soil-plant systems. Compared to DI, PRD significantly increased soil respiration rate while lowering soil total organic C content. Moreover, PRD increased soil inorganic N content, which might be related to increased mineralization of soil organic C (SOC) and soil organic N (SON). Such effects might implicate that PRD outperformed DI in enhancing the mineralization of soil organic matter. Although PRD alone might not be a sustainable irrigation method because of greater C and N losses, biochar addition could alleviate these undesirable effects via depressing SOC and SON mineralization. Biochar amendment, especially WSP combined with PRD, could be a promising practice to increase maize growth and water-use efficiency while sustaining C and N retention in the soil-plant systems.Highlightscenter dot Effects of biochar addition and irrigation regimes on C and N retention in the soil-plant systems of maize were investigated.center dot Biochar increased plant N retention and maize growth. Partial root-zone drying (PRD) irrigation increased soil respiration rate and soil organic C and N mineralization.center dot Biochar addition combined with PRD improved maize growth, water-use efficiency, and sustained C and N retention in the soil-plant systems.

KW - Biochar

KW - Drying/wetting cycles

KW - C and N retention

KW - Isotope composition

KW - Mineralization

KW - GREENHOUSE-GAS EMISSIONS

KW - NITROGEN-RETENTION

KW - MICROBIAL ACTIVITY

KW - MYCORRHIZAL FUNGI

KW - NATURAL-ABUNDANCE

KW - CARBON

KW - IMPACT

KW - YIELD

KW - NUTRITION

KW - ISOTOPES

U2 - 10.1007/s42729-023-01223-5

DO - 10.1007/s42729-023-01223-5

M3 - Journal article

VL - 23

SP - 1576

EP - 1588

JO - Journal of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition

JF - Journal of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition

SN - 0718-9516

ER -

ID: 347485003