EFFECT OF BIOCHAR ON SOIL ACIDITY, PH BUFFERING CAPACITY AND NUTRIENT STATUS OF AN ULTISOL PLANTED TO CUCUMBER (CUCUMIS SATIVUS L.) IN UMUDIKE, SOUTHEASTERN NIGERIA

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ABSTRACT

Soil acidity has remained a major yield limiting factor for crop production worldwide, and in Umudike Southeastern Nigeria, where the soils are characterized by high acidity and low nutrient status, Incubation studies, field experiment and laboratory analysis were carried out to investigate the effects of biochar on soil acidity, pH-buffering capacity and nutrient status in an Ultisol planted to cucumber in Umudike, Southeastern Nigeria. The treatments were 0 tonne per hectare biochar, 1 tonne per hectare biochar, 3 tonnes per hectare biochar, 5 tonnes per hectare biochar, 1 tonne biochar + 400kg NPK (15:15:15) per hectare, 3 tonnes biochar + 400kg NPK (15:15:15)  per hectare, 5 tonnes biochar + 400kg NPK (15:15:15) per hectare and 400 kg NPK (15:15:15)  per hectare. The treatments were replicated 3 times. The incubation studies were carried out to investigate the effect of the treatments on soil pH and Exchangeable acidity of the soil under study over a period of four weeks, using the equivalent of the treatments used in the field experiment, 0g biochar, 1.6g biochar, 5g biochar, 8g of biochar, 1.6g biochar + 0.6g NPK(15:15:15), 5g biochar +0.6g NPK(15:15:15), 8g biochar +1.6g of NPK(15:15:15) and 0.6g of NPK(15:15:15). Each of the treatments was added to 50g of soil in plastic containers of equal size and basal diameter and replicated three times. The soil used for the incubation studies was strongly acidic, having a pH (H2O) of 4.38 and exchangeable acidity of 1.84. The soil pH (H2O) and Exchangeable acidity were determined on the incubated samples at weekly interval for 4 weeks, using standard laboratory procedures. The effect of the treatments on the pH-buffering capacity of the soil during incubation was also determined using standard procedures. Results obtained showed that 5 tonnes per hectare biochar significantly (P<0.05) increased soil pH from 4.38 to 8.1, 8.64, 8.20 and 8.42 from week 1 to week 4 of incubation respectively, while Exchangeable acidity was reduced from 1.84 to 0.34, 0.61, 0.56 and 0.37 from week 1 to week 4 respectively throughout the incubation period. The pH-buffering capacity of the incubated soil was also increased by 96%, 97%, 87% and 92% from week 1 to week 4 respectively. The field experiment was laid out in a randomized complete block design and conducted at Michael Okpara University of Agriculture Eastern Farm. The soil used for the experiment was strongly acidic, having a pH (H2O) of 4.50 and exchangeable acidity of 1.44 cmolkg-1. The variety of cucumber planted was “Market More” and the result obtained from the field experiment indicated a significant (P<0.05) increase in the number of leaves and vine length of cucumber by 3 tonnes biochar + 400 kg NPK (15:15:15) per hectare over other treatments. It could therefore be inferred that the application of biochar as soil amendment can viably ameliorate soil acidity, increase soil pH-buffering capacity, enhance nutrient status and invariably improve cucumber growth in the soils of the study area.






TABLE OF CONTENTS

Title page                                                                                                                    i

Declaration                                                                                                                 ii

Certification                                                                                                               iii

Dedication                                                                                                                  iv

Acknowledgements                                                                                                    v

Table of Contents                                                                                                       vi

List of Tables                                                                                                              x

List of Figures                                                                                                             xi

List of Plates                                                                                                               xii

Abstract                                                                                                                      xiii

 

CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION                                                                            1

CHAPTER 2: LITERATURE REVIEW                                                               5

2.1       Soil Acidity                                                                                                    5

2.1.1    Effect of soil acidity on soil nutrients                                                            6

2.2       Biochar                                                                                                           6

2.3       Pyrolysis                                                                                                         7

2.3.1    Methods of pyrolysis                                                                                      7

2.4       Feedstock                                                                                                        9

2.5       Biochar Application Methods                                                                        10

2.5.1    Top soil application                                                                                        11

2.5.2    Depth application                                                                                           11

2.5.3    Top dressing                                                                                                   11

2.6       Biochar Quality                                                                                              11

2.6.1    Characteristics of biochar                                                                               12

2.6.2    Physical structure of biochar                                                                          13

2.6.3    Particle size distribution of biochar                                                                14

2.6.4    pH of biochar                                                                                                  14

2.6.5    Ash content of biochar                                                                                   15

2.6.6    Ion exchange capacities of biochar                                                                15

2.6.7    Biochar nutrient content                                                                                 16

2.6.8    Physicochemical properties of biochar                                                           17

2.7       Effect of Biochar on Soil pH Buffering Capacity                                          18

2.8       Effect of Biochar on Soil Properties                                                              19

2.8.1    Effect of biochar on soil chemical properties                                                19

2.8.2    Effect of biochar on soil structure                                                                  20

2.8.3    Effect of biochar on soil microbial community                                             21

2.9       Biochar and Soil Nutrient Transformation                                                     21

2.9.1    Nitrogen fixation                                                                                            21

2.9.2    Nitrogen mineralization                                                                                 22

2.9.3    Nitrogen immobilization                                                                                22

2.9.4    Denitrifiaction                                                                                                23

2.9.5    Phosphorus availability                                                                                  23

2.10        Effect of Biochar on Soil Nutrient Leaching                                                                 24

2.11     Effect of Biochar on Crop Productivity                                                         25

2.12     Economic Implication of Biochar Use                                                           27

2.13     Cucumber                                                                                                       27

2.13.1 Agronomic requirement of cucumber                                                             28

CHAPTER 3: MATERIALS AND METHODS                                                    30

3.1       Description of Experimental Site                                                                   30

3.2       Soil Sampling                                                                                                30

3.3       Field Experiment                                                                                            31

3.4       Treatments                                                                                                      32

3.5       Biochar Production                                                                                         33

3.6       Biochar Application                                                                                       35

3.7      Growth Data Collection                                                                                                                                               36       

3.8       Incubation Studies                                                                                          37

3.9       pH- Buffering Capacity of Biochar                                                                38

3.10     Statistical Design                                                                                            38

CHAPTER 4: RESULTS AND DISCUSSION                                                      39

4.1       Initial Soil Analysis                                                                                                                                                    39       

4.2       Biochar Analysis                                                                                            42

4.3       Effect of the Treatments on pH and Exchangeable Acidity During

Incubation                                                                                                       45       

4.4       Effect of the Treatments on pH Buffering Capacity of the Soil During

 Incubation                                                                                                      52

4.5       Effect of the Treatments on Soil Properties after Application                     54

4.6       Effect of the Treatments on Soil pH during the Field Experiment                         54

4.6.1    Effect of the treatments on the other chemical properties of the soil                  55

4.7       Correlation Matrix for Soil Properties                                                           60

4.8       Effect of the Treatments on Growth of Cucumber                                         63

CHAPTER 5: CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATION                             66

References                                                                                                      68

Appendix                                                                                                        88

 

 


 

 

 

 

LIST OF TABLES

                                                                     Page

 

2.1       Processes contributing to increased levels of hydrogen (H+) ions in            

Soil solution, thereby resulting in increasingly acidic conditions.                                5   

4.1               Physical and chemical properties of the soil used for the field experiment         41

4.2         Some properties of the biochar used for the experiment                                                                                                            43

4.3         Physical and chemical properties of the soil before treatment application                                                            

              during the incubation studies.                                                                                                                              44

4.4                Effect of the treatments on soil pH buffering capacity during Incubation          56

4.5         Effect of treatment on soil properties at 4Weeks after treatment

  application                                                                                                            60

4.6         Effect of treatment on soil properties at 8 Weeks after treatment

  application                                                                                                            61

4.7         Effect of treatment on soil properties at 12 weeks after treatment application    62

4.8       Correlation matrix for soil properties                                                                     65

4.9         Effect of the treatments on number of leaves produced by Cucumber                67

 4.10     Effect of the treatments on vine length produced by cucumber                                68

 

 




 

LIST OF FIGURES

                                                                                          Page

3.1                   Field Layout                                                                                        33

4.1                   Effect of treatments on soil pH at week 1,2,3 and 4 of incubation    50          

4.2                   Effect of treatments on exchangeable acidity (cmol/kg) at week

1,2,3 and  4 of incubation                                                                   51

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

LIST OF PLATES

                                                                                                                                    Page

3.1                               Local Biochar Drum during Biochar Production                        34

3.2                               Biochar After Production                                                       34

3.3                               Biochar Application                                                               35

3.4                               Cucumber at 6 weeks five days after planting.                        36

 

 

 


 

CHAPTER 1

INTRODUCTION

Soil acidity is a major factor that limits yield in crop production worldwide and acid soils account for about 4 billion hectares of the total world land area (Von and Mutert, 1997). This is 30% of the total world land area and 58% of land suitable for agriculture, inhabited by 73% of the world’s population. As a result of extensive weathering and leaching, most soils found in South and North America, Asia and Africa, are acidic (Muindi et al., 2016). Soil acidity is linked with toxicity of hydrogen (H), aluminium (Al), iron (Fe) and manganese (Mn) especially to plant roots and corresponding deficiencies of plant available phosphorus (P), molybdenum (Mo), calcium (Ca), magnesium (Mg) and potassium (K) (Giller and Wilson 1991; Jorge and Arranda 1997; Muindi, 2016) which negatively affects the fertility and productivity of the soil (Muindi et al., 2016).

Soils found in southeastern Nigeria which are characterized by high acidity and low rate of exchangeable cations cannot support optimal crop production without the use of soil amendment. The application of biochar, has been proven to change soil pH to a more neutral pH, especially in acidic soils (Fowles, 2007). The changes in CEC and pH create a suitable environment for growing crops in an area that cannot support optimal crop production.  

The use of biochar, as soil amendment to mitigate man-induced climate change, as well as to improve soil productivity was proposed as a new approach (McHenry, 2009).  However, the usage of charred materials as soil amendment is not a new concept. In the Amazon River Basin, there are areas that have remained productive for thousands of years due to charcoal accumulation that significantly increased the carbon’s stability against microbial decay (Steiner et al., 2007). The Amazonian Dark Earth now serves as a guide to create a carbon sink in soils as well as hold the possibility to reduce the amount of fertilizer farmers need to apply to fields.

Presently, application of biochar to soils is attaining universal attention due to the potential of it improving fertility in acidic soils by enhancing soil properties such as pH, cation-exchange-capacity and water-holding-capacity (Smebye, 2014) as well as soil nutrient retention capacity and sustaining carbon storage, thereby reducing the emission of greenhouse gas (Downie et al., 2009; Abukari, 2014). As such, biochar can concurrently act in both soil modification, improving soil physical condition and as carbon sequestration medium, giving a high prospect that could help decrease atmospheric carbondioxide in the near future (Amonette and Joseph, 2009).  Biochar is therefore seen as a simple approach, yet a very powerful tool to combat soil acidity challenge by significantly increasing soil cation exchange capacity (Yuan et al., 2011b) thereby, increasing the pH buffering capacity of acidic soils (Xu et al., 2012). Biochar contains ample amounts of oxygen-containing functional groups which supply negative surface charge of biochar (Yuan et al., 2011a; Xu et al., 2012). The oxygen-containing functional group is regarded as the main mechanism in biochar that increases the pH buffering capacity of acid soils treated with biochar (Xu et al., 2012). Furthermore, biochar is known to have the capability of reducing soil compaction, improving soil physical condition, enhancing plant nutrient uptake from the soil and decreasing emission of nitrous oxide (Lehmann et al., 2005; Lehmann 2007; Kannan et al., 2012). Biochar has the potential to increase the availability of plant nutrients (Lehmann et al., 2008); through increasing cation exchange capacity (CEC), improving soil pH, or immediate nutrient contributions from the biochar itself. According to Mbagwu and Piccolo (1997) the potential mechanism for improved nutrient retention and supply due to biochar modification is the increase of cation exchange capacity up to 50% as compared to unamended soils. Biochar has a greater capacity to absorb and retain cations than other forms of soil organic amendment owing to its greater surface area, and the negative surface charge that is found on biochar (Liang et al., 2006; Abukari, 2014).

Cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) is an important vegetable, thought to be one of the oldest vegetables with historical records dating as far back as 5000 years (Wehner and Guner, 2004). The crop is cultivated mainly for its fruits and eaten fresh (salad). The fruit is rich in nutrients and vitamins such vitamin E, K, C, A among others; minerals such as magnesium, potassium, zinc, calcium and phosphorus as well as phyto-nutrients like Carotene-B, Xanthein-B and Lutein (Vimale et al., 1999; Nwofia et al., 2015). The nutritional composition of cucumber fruit per 100g edible portion is as follows: carbohydrate, protein, total fat and dietary fibre at 3, 1, 0.5, and 1 percent respectively (USDA, National Data Base, 2014).

The crop requires fertile soils as infertile soils affect the quality of the fruit resulting in bitter and misshapen fruits (Eifediyi and Remison, 2010). As a short gestation crop, cucumber requires instant release of nutrient in the field which inorganic fertilizer can supply better than organic fertilizer (Marjan, 2005). However, under intensive agriculture, the use of inorganic fertilizer has not been helpful because of the high cost, associated reduction in the crop yields, nutrient imbalance, soil degradation and acidity (Kang and Juo, 1980; Obi and Ebo, 1995; Eifediyi and Remison, 2010).

Therefore, this study’s overall objective was to examine the influence of biochar on some soil physicochemical properties and neutralization of acidity on ultisols of Umudike, Southeastern Nigeria.

The objectives were:

i.         To evaluate the acid neutralizing effect of biochar on the soil in a controlled environment.

ii.         To evaluate the pH-buffering capacity of biochar on an ultisol in Umudike, Southeastern Nigeria.

iii.         To determine the effect of biochar on soil chemical properties.

iv.         To determine the effect of biochar on the growth of cucumber.

 

 

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