Zhang et al., in Environmental Technology & Innovation, investigated the long-term effects of biocharBiochar is a carbon-rich material created from biomass decomposition in low-oxygen conditions. It has important applications in environmental remediation, soil improvement, agriculture, carbon sequestration, energy storage, and sustainable materials, promoting efficiency and reducing waste in various contexts while addressing climate change challenges. More application on methane (CH4) emissions, methane-associated microbial communities, and rice yield. The study focused on the impact of biochar application duration and rate on paddy soil.
Five treatments were assessed based on the year of biochar application (NB: applied in April 2023; FB: applied in April 2016) along with three biochar application rates (CK: 0 t ha−1; NB15, FB15: 15 t ha−1; NB45, FB45: 45 t ha−1). Biochar application improved the physical and chemical properties of the soil, with NB45 exhibiting the most pronounced effect. Compared with CK, CH4 emissions increased under NB conditions but decreased under FB conditions. Additionally, emissions were higher at lower biochar application rates than at higher rates across all years. These trends were associated with shifts in the abundance of methanogenic and methane-oxidising bacteria in the soil. Biochar reduced the pmoA/mcrA ratio in paddy soil, with FB45 showing the greatest reduction. The composition of methanogenic and methane-oxidising bacterial species differed significantly between NB and FB soils, with Chloroflexota exhibiting the highest relative abundance in both bacterial groups. Biochar application enhanced CH4 metabolism in methanogenic and methane-oxidising bacteria, with the strongest effect observed under the NB treatment. Moreover, biochar application significantly improved rice yield, increasing by 9.27%, 12.58%, 13.50%, and 14.68% under the NB15, NB45, FB15, and FB45 treatments, respectively.
Overall, biochar effectively reduced CH4 emissions, modulated the structure and function of methane-associated microbial communities, and enhanced rice yield.
SOURCE: Zhang, K., Zhang, Z., Sui, Y., Wang, J., Pei, X., Zhao, Y., Gao, J., & Zhang, W. (2025). The application years of biochar affect CH4 emission by negatively methanogens and increased rice yield. Environmental Technology & Innovation, 27, 104099. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eti.2025.104099






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