Biochar and denitrification in soils: when, how much and why does biochar reduce N2O emissions?
2. Zero hunger
Nitrogen
Nitrous Oxide
Agriculture
04 agricultural and veterinary sciences
15. Life on land
Article
Soil
13. Climate action
Charcoal
Denitrification
0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
Gases
DOI:
10.1038/srep01732
Publication Date:
2013-04-25T09:04:52Z
AUTHORS (6)
ABSTRACT
Agricultural soils represent the main source of anthropogenic N2O emissions. Recently, interactions of black carbon with the nitrogen cycle have been recognized and the use of biochar is being investigated as a means to reduce N2O emissions. However, the mechanisms of reduction remain unclear. Here we demonstrate the significant impact of biochar on denitrification, with a consistent decrease in N2O emissions by 10-90% in 14 different agricultural soils. Using the (15)N gas-flux method we observed a consistent reduction of the N2O/(N2 + N2O) ratio, which demonstrates that biochar facilitates the last step of denitrification. Biochar acid buffer capacity was identified as an important aspect for mitigation that was not primarily caused by a pH shift in soil. We propose the function of biochar as an "electron shuttle" that facilitates the transfer of electrons to soil denitrifying microorganisms, which together with its liming effect would promote the reduction of N2O to N2.
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