Difference between revisions of "Biochar: Effects on Soil and Crops"

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Revision as of 14:26, 1 December 2009

Biochar's effects on soil fertility and quality

Organic matter added to soil helps it retain nutrients that are essential to plant growth. Proponents of biochar say that it is much more effective than other organic matter in retaining nutrients and keeping them available to plants. A study by Johannes Lehmann says this is also true for phosphorus, which is not retained by 'normal' soil organic matter.[1]

Researchers who have tested the impact of charcoal on soil fertility say that much of the benefit may derive from charcoal’s vast surface area and complex pore structure, which is hospitable to the bacteria and fungi that plants need to absorb nutrients from the soil. Christoph Steiner, a research scientist at the University of Georgia, says, "We believe that the structure of charcoal provides a secure habitat for microbiota, which is very important for crop production." Steiner and coauthors noted in their 2003 book Amazonian Dark Earths that the charcoal addition to soil caused a 280-400% increase in plant uptake of nitrogen.[2]

A report for Biofuelwatch, however, says that over-reliance on biochar to create soil fertility is dangerously reductionist. It says the farmers who created terra preta added different types of biomass the soil, thus building up humus as well as charcoal. Biochar advocates, on the other hand, “promote stripping the land of ‘agricultural and forestry residues’, which would greatly reduce humus.” Done on a large scale, the report warns, this would “replace at least some humus with biologically dead charcoal, an untested but potentially very dangerous strategy.”[3]

Resources

Notes

  1. Lehmann, J., 2007 Bio-energy in the black. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 5, 381-387.
  2. Tenenbaum, David J., Biochar: carbon mitigation from the ground up, Environmental Health Perspectives, Feb 2009 v117 i2 pA70–74.
  3. Almuth Ernsting and Rachel Smolker, “Biochar for Climate Change Mitigation: Fact or Fiction?”, Biofuelwatch, February 2009, p. 4