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.)

被引:0
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作者
Heng Wan
Yiting Chen
Bingjing Cui
Xuezhi Liu
Jingxiang Hou
Zhenhua Wei
Jie Liu
Fulai Liu
机构
[1] Northwest A&F University,Key Laboratory of Agricultural Soil and Water Engineering in Arid and Semiarid Areas, Ministry of Education
[2] University of Copenhagen,Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Science
[3] University of Chinese Academy of Sciences,Sino
[4] Northwest A&F University,Danish Center for Education and Research
[5] Ningxia University,College of Water Resources and Architectural Engineering
关键词
Biochar; Drying/wetting cycles; C and N retention; Isotope composition; Mineralization;
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摘要
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.
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页码:1576 / 1588
页数:12
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