Biochar interacted with organic compounds from digestate in controlling N2O emissions

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Abstract

Treating biochar with digestate can form a C- and N-enriched biochar fertilizer, but its role in controlling N2O emission from soil with different pH is unclear. This study assessed N2O emission from rhizosphere soil after growing ryegrass with urea, urea plus biochar, solid digestate, and digestate-incorporated biochar, with and without liming. The abundances of bacteria, fungi, two nitrification genes (bacterial amoA; archaeal amoA), and four denitrification genes (nirK, nirS, nosZ for clade I and nosZII for clade II) were quantified using quantitative PCR. Bacterial community composition was characterized using amplicon sequencing. Solid digestate and urea plus biochar decreased N2O emission by 48% and 56%, respectively, relative to urea under non-liming. This corresponded to the increased bacterial abundance and greater increases in N2O-consuming (nosZ and nosZII) than N2O-producing (archaeal amoA, nirK, nirS) gene abundances. Digestate-incorporated biochar decreased N2O emission by 75% compared to solid digestate, with decreased nirK gene abundance and increased prevalence of the denitrifier Dokdonella. Liming resulted in the lowest N2O emissions and highest nosZII gene abundance among all treatments. This study demonstrated the value of incorporating biochar in digestate in reducing N2O emission while enhancing plant nutrition.

Original languageEnglish
Article number125591
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Environmental Management
Volume385
Early online date6 May 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2025

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