Literature DB >> 32314496

Increased yield and CO2 sequestration potential with the C4 cereal Sorghum bicolor cultivated in basaltic rock dust-amended agricultural soil.

Mike E Kelland1, Peter W Wade1, Amy L Lewis1, Lyla L Taylor1, Binoy Sarkar2, M Grace Andrews3, Mark R Lomas1, T E Anne Cotton1, Simon J Kemp4, Rachael H James3, Christopher R Pearce5, Sue E Hartley1, Mark E Hodson6, Jonathan R Leake1, Steven A Banwart7,8, David J Beerling1.   

Abstract

Land-based enhanced rock weathering (ERW) is a biogeochemical carbon dioxide removal (CDR) strategy aiming to accelerate natural geological processes of carbon sequestration through application of crushed silicate rocks, such as basalt, to croplands and forested landscapes. However, the efficacy of the approach when undertaken with basalt, and its potential co-benefits for agriculture, require experimental and field evaluation. Here we report that amending a UK clay-loam agricultural soil with a high loading (10 kg/m2 ) of relatively coarse-grained crushed basalt significantly increased the yield (21 ± 9.4%, SE) of the important C4 cereal Sorghum bicolor under controlled environmental conditions, without accumulation of potentially toxic trace elements in the seeds. Yield increases resulted from the basalt treatment after 120 days without P- and K-fertilizer addition. Shoot silicon concentrations also increased significantly (26 ± 5.4%, SE), with potential benefits for crop resistance to biotic and abiotic stress. Elemental budgets indicate substantial release of base cations important for inorganic carbon removal and their accumulation mainly in the soil exchangeable pools. Geochemical reactive transport modelling, constrained by elemental budgets, indicated CO2 sequestration rates of 2-4 t CO2 /ha, 1-5 years after a single application of basaltic rock dust, including via newly formed soil carbonate minerals whose long-term fate requires assessment through field trials. This represents an approximately fourfold increase in carbon capture compared to control plant-soil systems without basalt. Our results build support for ERW deployment as a CDR technique compatible with spreading basalt powder on acidic loamy soils common across millions of hectares of western European and North American agriculture.
© 2020 The Authors. Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  carbon removal; crop productivity; mineral weathering; negative emissions technology; reactive transport modelling; silicon; soil acidification

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32314496     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15089

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   10.863


  2 in total

1.  Optimizing Inorganic Carbon Sequestration and Crop Yield With Wollastonite Soil Amendment in a Microplot Study.

Authors:  Fatima Haque; Rafael M Santos; Yi Wai Chiang
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2020-07-03       Impact factor: 5.753

2.  Environmentally safe release of plant available potassium and micronutrients from organically amended rock mineral powder.

Authors:  B B Basak; Binoy Sarkar; Ravi Naidu
Journal:  Environ Geochem Health       Date:  2020-08-25       Impact factor: 4.609

  2 in total

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