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Effect of biochar amendment on yield and photosynthesis of peanut on two types of soils

journal contribution
posted on 2018-11-13, 00:00 authored by Chengyuan XuChengyuan Xu, S Hosseini-Bai, Y Hao, RCN Rachaputi, H Wang, Z Xu, H Wallace, Shahla Hosseini Bai
Biochar has significant potential to improve crop performance. This study examined the effect of biochar application on the photosynthesis and yield of peanut crop grown on two soil types. The commercial peanut cultivar Middleton was grown on red ferrosol and redoxi-hydrosol (Queensland, Australia) amended with a peanut shell biochar gradient (0, 0.375, 0.750, 1.50, 3.00 and 6.00 %, w/w, equivalent up to 85 t ha−1) in a glasshouse pot experiment. Biomass and pod yield, photosynthesis-[CO2] response parameters, leaf characteristics and soil properties (carbon, nitrogen (N) and nutrients) were quantified. Biochar significantly improved peanut biomass and pod yield up to 2- and 3-folds respectively in red ferrosol and redoxi-hydrosol. A modest (but significant) biochar-induced improvement of the maximumelectron transport rate and saturating photosynthetic rate was observed for red ferrosol. This response was correlated to increased leaf N and accompanied with improved soil available N and biological N fixation. Biochar application also improved the availability of other soil nutrients, which appeared critical in improving peanut performance, especially on infertile redoxihydrosol. Our study suggests that application of peanut shell derived biochar has strong potential to improve peanut yield on red ferrosol and redoxi-hydrosol. Biochar soil amendment can affect leaf N status and photosynthesis, but the effect varied with soil type.

Funding

Other

History

Volume

22

Issue

8

Start Page

6112

End Page

6125

Number of Pages

14

eISSN

1614-7499

ISSN

0944-1344

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2014-11-03

External Author Affiliations

Griffith University; University of the Sunshine Coast; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of Queensland; Zhejiang Agriculture and Forestry University

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Environmental Science and Pollution Research