Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

environmental science

Biochar-induced metal immobilization and soil biogeochemical process: An integrated mechanistic approach

Science of the Total Environment, Volume 698, Article 134112, Year 2020

The nature of biochar-derived dissolved organic matter (DOM) has a crucial role in the interactions between biochar and metal immobilization, carbon dynamics, and microbial communities in soil. This study utilized excitation–emission matrix coupled with parallel factor analysis (EEM-PARAFAC) modeling to provide mechanistic evidence of biochar-induced influences on main soil biogeochemical processes. Three biochars produced from rice straw, wood, and grass residues were added to sandy and sandy loam soils and incubated for 473 d. Microbial and terrestrial humic-like fluorescent components were identified in the soils after incubation. The sandy loam soil exhibited a higher DOM with microbial sources than did the sandy soil. All biochars reduced Pb bioavailability, whereas the rice straw biochar enhanced the As bioavailability in the sandy loam soil. The biochar-derived aliphatic-DOM positively correlated with As bioavailability (r = 0.82) in the sandy loam soil and enhanced the cumulative CO2-C (r = 0.59) in the sandy soil. The promoted cumulative CO2-C in the sandy soil with all biochars correlated with the enhanced microbial communities, in particular, gram-positive (r = 0.59) and gram-negative (r = 0.59) bacteria. Our results suggest that the integration of EEM-PARAFAC with spectroscopic indices could be useful for a comprehensive interpretation of the soil quality changes in response to the application of biochar.

Statistics
Citations: 119
Authors: 10
Affiliations: 10
Identifiers
Research Areas
Environmental