Biochar boosts tropical but not temperate crop yields
Harper Adams University · University of Guelph · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Applying biochar to soil is thought to have multiple benefits, from helping mitigate climate change [1, 2], to managing waste [3] to conserving soil [4]. Biochar is also widely assumed to boost crop yield [5, 6], but there is controversy regarding the extent and cause of any yield benefit [7]. Here we use a global-scale meta-analysis to show that biochar has, on average, no effect on crop yield in temperate latitudes, yet elicits a 25% average increase in yield in the tropics. In the tropics, biochar increased yield through liming and fertilization, consistent with the low soil pH, low fertility, and low fertilizer inputs typical of arable tropical soils. We also found that, in tropical soils, high-nutrient…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 57.78
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 45
Authors
7Topics & keywords
- Biochar
- Environmental science
- Temperate climate
- Agronomy
- Arable land
- Soil fertility
- Tropics
- Slash-and-char
- Zero hunger