Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14279/19420
Title: Plant nutrient availability and pH of biochars and their fractions, with the possible use as a component in a growing media
Authors: Prasad, Munoo 
Chrysargyris, Antonios 
McDaniel, Nicola 
Kavanagh, Anna 
Gruda, Nazim 
Tzortzakis, Nikos G. 
Major Field of Science: Agricultural Sciences
Field Category: Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries
Keywords: Calcium;Extractable nutrients;Magnesium;Particle size;Peat replacement
Issue Date: Jan-2020
Source: Agronomy, 2020, vol. 10, no. 1, articl. no. 10
Volume: 10
Issue: 1
Journal: Agronomy 
Abstract: Biochar has the potential to be used as a growing media component, and therefore plays a role in reducing peat usage. It has unique properties apart from the ability to sequester carbon. Here we investigated the nutrient contents of four commercial biochars and their fractions. The biochars’ feedstock was wood waste, except for one with paper fibres and husk. The fine or finer fractions in wood waste biochars contained higher levels of nutrients that were available to plants. The coarse fraction of the biochar derived from husk and paper fibre feedstock had a higher level of total N, P and K in contrast to the other three biochars. The pH of the finer fraction (pH of 9.08) was also higher compared with coarse fraction (pH of 8.71). It is important that when biochar a is used as a component of a peat based growing media, particle size information should be provided, as fractions from the same biochar can have different levels of total extractable nutrients and pH levels. If biochar is used to replace or reduce lime application rates of a peat-biochar mixtures, one must take into account the levels of total and extractable Ca and Mg levels, as these can vary. The variation of these elements was not only between biochars’ feedstocks, even at similar pH-values, but within different fractions in the same biochar. We concluded that biochars should be characterized from the feedstock as well as from the particle size aspect, as it could have a profound effect on nutrient availability of Ca and Mg. This could lead to nutrient imbalances in cultivating plants on substrate mixtures. In addition to nutrient ratios, the suitable pH-level for a given grown species should be adjusted.
Description: This research was funded by Bord na Mona Horticulture Ltd and Cyprus University of Technology under the project OPTIBIOCHAR and Cyprus University of Technology Open Access Author Fund.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14279/19420
ISSN: 20734395
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy10010010
Rights: © by the authors.
Type: Article
Affiliation : Compost/AD Research & Advisory 
Cyprus University of Technology 
Bord na Mona Horticulture Ltd. Research Centre 
University of Bonn 
Appears in Collections:Άρθρα/Articles

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