posted on 2016-03-08, 00:00authored byQiuxia Wang, Suduan Gao, Dong Wang, Kurt Spokas, Aocheng Cao, Dongdong Yan
Biochar, which is organic material
heated under a limited supply
of oxygen, has the potential to reduce fumigant emissions when incorporated
in the soil, but the mechanisms are not fully understood. The objective
of this study was to determine the effects of biochar properties,
amendment rate, soil microbe, moisture, temperature, and soil type
on the fate of 1,3-dichloropropene (1,3-D) isomers in laboratory incubation
experiments by assessing the 1,3-D degradation rate and adsorption
capacity. 1,3-D dissipation rates were significantly reduced due to
strong adsorption by biochar, which was also strongly affected by
biochar type. Following a 1% biochar amendment, the half-lives of
1,3-D in soil were increased 2.5–35 times. The half-lives of
1,3-D in soil were strongly affected by soil moisture, temperature,
and amendment rate. The effects of sterilization on 1,3-D degradation
were much smaller in biochar-amended soils than in nonsterilized soils,
which suggests the importance of abiotic pathways with biochar’s
presence. Dissipation of 1,3-D in biochar was divided into adsorption
(49–93%) and chemical degradation pathways. Biochar properties,
such as specific surface area (SSA), pH, water content, carbon content,
and feedstock, all appeared to affect 1,3-D dissipation with potentially
complex interactions. The biochar (air-dry) water content was highly
correlated with 1,3-D adsorption capacity and thus can serve as an
important predictor for fumigant mitigation use. The fate of the adsorbed
fumigant onto biochar requires further examination on potential long-term
environmental impacts before guidelines for biochar as a field practice
to control fumigant emissions can be formulated.