Search results for "Slash-and-char"

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Birch (Betula spp.) wood biochar is a potential soil amendment to reduce glyphosate leaching in agricultural soils

2015

Glyphosate (N-(phosphonomethyl) glycine), a commonly used herbicide in agriculture can leach to deeper soil layers and settle in surface- and ground waters. To mitigate the leaching of pesticides and nutrients, biochar has been suggested as a potential soil amendment due to its ability to sorb both organic and inorganic substances. However, the efficiency of biochar in retaining agro-chemicals in the soil is likely to vary with feedstock material and pyrolysis conditions. A greenhouse pot experiment, mimicking a crop rotation cycle of three plant genera, was established to study the effects of pyrolysis temperature on the ability of birch (Betula sp.) wood originated biochar to reduce the l…

Crops AgriculturalEnvironmental EngineeringGlycineAmendment010501 environmental sciencesManagement Monitoring Policy and Law01 natural sciencesSlash-and-charSoilBiocharSoil PollutantsPesticidesLeaching (agriculture)CharcoalWaste Management and DisposalBetula0105 earth and related environmental sciences2. Zero hungerHerbicidesChemistryWater PollutionTemperatureAgriculturePhosphorus04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesGeneral Medicine15. Life on landCrop rotationWood6. Clean waterAgronomy13. Climate actionCharcoalvisual_artSoil water040103 agronomy & agriculturevisual_art.visual_art_medium0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesSoil horizonJournal of Environmental Management
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Fourfold Increase in Pumpkin Yield in Response to Low-Dosage Root Zone Application of Urine-Enhanced Biochar to a Fertile Tropical Soil

2015

A widely abundant and invasive forest shrub, Eupatorium adenophorum, was pyrolyzed in a cost-efficient flame curtain kiln to produce biochar. The resulting biochar fulfilled all the requirements for premium quality, according to the European Biochar Certificate. The biochar was either applied alone or mixed with fresh cow urine (1:1 volume) to test its capacity to serve as slow release fertilizer in a pumpkin field trial in Nepal. Treatments included cow-manure compost combined with (i) urine-only; (ii) biochar-only or (iii) urine-loaded biochar. All materials were applied directly to the root zone at a biochar dry matter content of 750 kg·ha−1 before seeding. The urine-biochar treatment le…

flame curtain pyrolysisCompostChemistryPlant Scienceengineering.materiallcsh:S1-972urineSlash-and-charNutrientAgronomyorganic fertilizerroot zone fertilizer applicationLoamBiocharengineeringpumpkinbiocharFertilizerorganic coatinglcsh:Agriculture (General)Agronomy and Crop SciencePyrolysisOrganic fertilizerFood Science
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