Literature DB >> 28084598

Amelioration of an acidic ultisol by straw-derived biochars combined with dicyandiamide under application of urea.

Khalid Mehmood1,2,3, Jiu-Yu Li1, Jun Jiang1, Ren-Yong Shi1,2, Zhao-Dong Liu1,2, Ren-Kou Xu4.   

Abstract

The rapid increase in agricultural pollution demands judicious use of inputs and outputs for sustainable crop production. Crop straws were pyrolyzed under oxygen-limited conditions at 400 °C for 2 h to prepare peanut straw biochar (PB), canola straw biochar (CB), and wheat straw biochar (WB). Then, 300-g soils were incubated each with urea nitrogen (UN) and UN + biochars with or without dicyandiamide (DCD) for 60 days. During the incubations, soil acidification induced by urea was somewhat inhibited by biochars, but nitrification of hydrolyzed NH4+ produced much more acidity than the neutralization potential of the biochars. In single UN (200 mg/kg) treatment, soil pH decreased drastically and the final pH after incubation was lower than the control. Antagonistic to UN, all three biochars neutralized the soil acidity, which was consistent to their inherent alkalinity. DCD inhibited nitrification which was obvious throughout the incubations, as 30 mg/kg DCD + 200 mg/kg UN combined with 1  % PB, CB, and WB retained 0.94, 0.79, and 1.19 units higher pH, respectively, and significantly reduced exchangeable acidity over the treatments without DCD (P < 0.05). The treatments of UN + biochars with and without DCD had highly significant effects on soil pH, exchangeable Al3+, NH4+-N, (NO3-+NO2-)-N, and available P (P < 0.05). Amplified NH4+-N retentions at higher rates of PB referred increased negatively charged sites for nutrient adsorptions. Applied UN transformations varied among different treatments, and the maximum amounts of total mineral N recovered were 218.3, 218.5, and 223.8 mg/kg in the presence of DCD by PB, CB, and WB, compared to 198.2, 201.6, and 205.2 mg/kg, respectively, in no DCD treatments. Urea induced severe soil acidification and even lowered the ameliorative effects of applied biochars. Thus, ammonium-based fertilizers must include nitrification inhibitor (DCD) and, if used in combination with biochars will offer a suitable choice to reduce the acidity, improve base saturation and fertility of soil for sustainable agriculture.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Acidity amelioration; Base saturation; Biochar; Dicyandiamide; NH4 + and (NO3 −+NO2 −)-N; Urea nitrogen

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28084598     DOI: 10.1007/s11356-017-8373-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int        ISSN: 0944-1344            Impact factor:   4.223


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  1 in total

1.  Incorporation of corn straw biochar inhibited the re-acidification of four acidic soils derived from different parent materials.

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