2014
DOI: 10.1079/pavsnnr20149019
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Biochar: an improver of nutrient and soil water availability - what is the evidence?

Abstract: Keywords: Biochar nutrient availability water availability soil fertility water holding capacity Methodology CAB Abstracts and Science Direct (keywords biochar, nutrients, water) along with sources at the University of Greenwich were searched to obtain up to date research papers. Personal collections of the corresponding author were obtained from various sources over the past 5 years were also used.This material has been published in CAB Reviews (2014) AbstractBiochar has consistently been proposed as a way o… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(29 citation statements)
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References 129 publications
(272 reference statements)
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“…Lower temperatures (around 400 • C) tend to produce more solid char (slow pyrolysis) [122,156]. The properties of the biochar are dependent not only on the pyrolysis conditions, but also on the feedstock [157]. Biochar has been produced experimentally from brown seaweeds including Sargassum spp., and has different properties to ligno-cellulosic biomass with relatively low carbon content and surface area, but with a high content of essential trace elements and exchangeable cations, particularly potassium [158].…”
Section: Biocharmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lower temperatures (around 400 • C) tend to produce more solid char (slow pyrolysis) [122,156]. The properties of the biochar are dependent not only on the pyrolysis conditions, but also on the feedstock [157]. Biochar has been produced experimentally from brown seaweeds including Sargassum spp., and has different properties to ligno-cellulosic biomass with relatively low carbon content and surface area, but with a high content of essential trace elements and exchangeable cations, particularly potassium [158].…”
Section: Biocharmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To make biochar amendments more consistently beneficial, Novak et al [27,30] theorized that biochars could be engineered through single or multi-feedstock selection, blending feedstocks, choosing appropriate physical states (e.g., pellets and dust), and modifying pyrolysis temperatures, to produce biochar materials that target specific soil health characteristics. The theory was termed "designer biochar" and the concept was vetted through several journal publications [1,[79][80][81][82].…”
Section: Designing Biochar With Specific Characteristicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Biochar is reported to improve soil physical, chemical, and biological properties and therefore affect the amount of P used by plant (Scott, Ponsonby, & Atkinson, ). Biochar is considered an important source of P (generally present in the inorganic form) because most of the P from feedstock is retained into biochar during the pyrolysis process (Kloss et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%