| Literature DB >> 33529883 |
Hasintha Wijesekara1, Kim Colyvas2, Paul Rippon2, Son A Hoang3, Nanthi S Bolan4, Madhab Chandra Manna5, Ramesh Thangavel6, Balaji Seshadri3, Meththika Vithanage7, Yasser M Awad8, Aravind Surapaneni9, Christopher Saint10, Guanglong Tian11, Silvana Torri12, Yong Sik Ok13, M B Kirkham14.
Abstract
Biosolids produced at wastewater treatment facilities are extensively used in agricultural land and degraded mine sites to improve soil health and soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks. Many studies have reported increases in SOC due to application of biosolids to such sites. However, lack of a comprehensive quantification on overall trends and changes of magnitude in SOC remains. Here, we performed a meta-analysis to identify drivers with a relationship with SOC stocks. A meta-regression of 297 treatments found four variables with a relationship with SOC stocks: cumulative biosolids carbon (C) input rate, time after application, soil depth and type of biosolids. The cumulative biosolids C input rate was the most influencing driver. The highest mean difference for SOC% of 3.3 was observed at 0-15 cm soil depth for a cumulative C input of 100 Mg ha-1 at one year after biosolids application. Although years after biosolids application demonstrated a negative relationship with SOC stocks, mineralization of C in biosolids-applied soils is slow, as indicated with the SOC% decrease from 4.6 to 2.8 at 0-15 cm soil depth over five years of 100 Mg ha-1 biosolids C input. Soil depth illustrated a strong negative effect with SOC stocks decreasing by 2.7% at 0-15 cm soil depth at a cumulative biosolids C input of 100 Mg ha-1 over a year. Overall, our model estimated an effect of 2.8 SOC% change, indicating the application of biosolids as a viable strategy for soil C sequestration on a global scale.Entities:
Keywords: Biowaste utilization; Climate change mitigation; Sewage sludge; Soil fertility; Soil organic carbon
Year: 2021 PMID: 33529883 DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.112008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Environ Manage ISSN: 0301-4797 Impact factor: 6.789