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  4. Anthropogenic charcoal-rich soils of the XIX century reveal that biochar leads to enhanced fertility and fodder quality of alpine grasslands
 
conference paper

Anthropogenic charcoal-rich soils of the XIX century reveal that biochar leads to enhanced fertility and fodder quality of alpine grasslands

Criscuoli, I.
•
Baronti, S.
•
Alberti, G.
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2017
Plant And Soil
4th International Zinc (Zn) Symposium

Soil incorporation of charcoal (biochar) has been suggested as practice to sequester carbon, improve soil properties and crop yields but most studies have been done in the short term. Old anthropogenic charcoal-rich soils in the Alps enable to explore the long-term impact of charcoal addition to alpine grassland on seed germination, fertility and fodder nutritive value. A germination test and a growth experiment in pots with Festuca nigrescens Lam. and Trifolium pratense L. were performed using three different substrates: control soil (i.e. sandy-loam brown acid soils with some podsolization), charcoal hearth soil (i.e. charcoal-enriched anthropogenic soils derived from the carbonization of larch wood on flat terraces) and control soil mixed with a fraction of fresh larch wood charcoal to reach the soil-charcoal ratio of 0.6. Both aged and fresh charcoal improved germination and markedly increased plant growth of the two plant species. The addition of fresh charcoal had an initial detrimental effect that disappeared in the second and third growth cycles. Plant Nitrogen:Phosphorus ratio revealed that growth was N-limited in the anthropogenic soils and P-limited in the control and freshly amended soils demonstrating that biochar aging is critical to obtain a significant growth stimulation. Plant nutrient contents revealed an improved fodder quality in both the charcoal amended soils. Despite the occurrence of limited toxic effects on seedlings, larch wood charcoal appears to have positive effects on fertility and fodder quality of alpine grasslands in the long term.

  • Details
  • Metrics
Type
conference paper
DOI
10.1007/s11104-016-3046-3
Web of Science ID

WOS:000394142900035

Author(s)
Criscuoli, I.
Baronti, S.
Alberti, G.
Rumpel, C.
Giordan, M.
Camin, F.
Ziller, L.
Martinez, C.
Pusceddu, E.
Miglietta, F.
Date Issued

2017

Publisher

Springer

Publisher place

Dordrecht

Published in
Plant And Soil
Total of pages

18

Volume

411

Issue

1-2

Start page

499

End page

516

Subjects

Biochar

•

Charcoal

•

Alpine grasslands

•

Fertility

•

N:P ratio

•

Fodder nutritional value

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
IIE  
Event nameEvent placeEvent date
4th International Zinc (Zn) Symposium

Sao Paulo, BRAZIL

OCT 15-17, 2015

Available on Infoscience
March 27, 2017
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/135915
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