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Long-Term Biochar Application Enhances Carbon-Phosphorus Costabilization and Mitigates Methane Emissions in Flooded Rice Systems

Authors
Chen, HaoXu, JiahuiYuan, JiahuiWang, LeiChen, GuangleiTurner, Benjamin L.Wang, ShenqiangWang, Yu
Issue Date
Feb-2026
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Keywords
long-term field biochar; OC-mineral-P complexes; calcium bridging; paddy soils; phosphorus retention; methane mitigation; climate-smart agriculture
Citation
Environmental Science & Technology
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Environmental Science & Technology
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/82524
DOI
10.1021/acs.est.5c13617
ISSN
0013-936X
1520-5851
Abstract
Biochar is increasingly promoted as a climate-smart amendment, yet its long-term effects on nutrient retention and greenhouse gas emissions in flooded rice systems remain poorly resolved. Here, we combine a 13 year field trial with graded straw biochar applications (0-22.5 t ha-1 season-1) and a 60 day anaerobic incubation of year-13 soils to investigate how mineral and microbial processes regulate soil organic carbon (SOC), phosphorus (P), and methane (CH4) dynamics. Long-term biochar progressively depleted Fe oxides and enriched Ca phases, promoting the formation of Ca-bridged OC-mineral-P complexes that costabilize OC and P. Under prolonged anoxia, soils amended with high rates of biochar exhibited 2.5-3.2-fold slower Fe(III) reduction and delayed sulfate reduction, resulting in 53-80% lower CH4 emissions and 60-71% P release relative to the no-biochar control. Nanoscale imaging and microbial profiling corroborated this mineral transition, showing a shift toward redox-resilient organo-mineral complexes and microbial communities associated with suppressed methanogenesis and enhanced nutrient retention. These findings provide long-term field-based evidence that biochar can simultaneously sustain crop productivity, enhance C and P retention, and mitigate CH4 emissions in flooded rice agroecosystems. Our findings highlight biochar's potential as a scalable nature-based strategy for integrating nutrient management with climate mitigation in global rice production.
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