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- Title
Phosphorus availability and grass growth in biochar‐modified acid soil: A study excluding the effects of soil pH.
- Authors
Fonseca, Aymbiré Angeletti; Santos, Danilo Andrade; Passos, Renato Ribeiro; Andrade, Felipe Vaz; Rangel, Otacílio José Passos; Aitkenhead, Matt
- Abstract
The low efficiency of phosphorus fertilization in weathered soils can limit plant development. The application of biochars in these areas has been seen as an important way to increase the efficiency of phosphorus fertilization and to promote better plant growth. However, biochars are alkaline materials that can increase soil pH and thus change the nutrient dynamics, which has been often ignored in studies of this nature. Here, all treatments had their pH standardized at 6.1 to eliminate the influence of pH on biochar application responses. The main goal of this study was to evaluate the real potential of coffee straw and eucalyptus bark biochars, produced under different pyrolysis temperatures, in the optimization of phosphorus fertilization and the development of Brachiaria brizantha. A greenhouse experiment was set up in a 2 × 2 × 5 factorial scheme, conducted for 120 days. The biochars, prepared from coffee straw and eucalyptus bark at 350 and 600°C, were applied at five rates in a Red‐Yellow Oxisol. The application of biochars may reduce the demand for nutrients and correctives, optimize phosphorus fertilization and improve the development of Brachiaria brizantha, but this ability depends on the raw material and the pyrolysis temperature used in its production. All analysed biochars can contribute to higher tillering and dry matter production, but only coffee straw biochars and eucalyptus bark biochar produced at 350°C were efficient in the optimization of phosphorus fertilization until 120 days of cultivation of Brachiaria brizantha.
- Subjects
SOIL acidity; EUCALYPTUS; ACID soils; PH effect; COFFEE beans; FERTILIZERS; PHOSPHORUS; PLANT development
- Publication
Soil Use & Management, 2020, Vol 36, Issue 4, p714
- ISSN
0266-0032
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/sum.12609