Agro‑environmental characterization of biochar issued from crop wastes in the humid forest zone of Cameroon

Publish Year: 1398
نوع سند: مقاله ژورنالی
زبان: English
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شناسه ملی سند علمی:

JR_ROWA-8-1_003

تاریخ نمایه سازی: 6 اسفند 1398

Abstract:

Purpose Crop wastes are underused organic resources due to low heating value and slow decomposition rates. However,conversion to biochar through pyrolysis could offer agronomic and environmental benefits. The study compared the pyrolysisof biochar from crop wastes, assessed their physicochemical properties for the purposeful use to improve soil fertility, cropproductivity and their carbon sequestration potential.Methods Biochar was produced from crop wastes such as cassava residues, corncobs, rice husk, sawdust, coffee husk, andpeanut using an Elsa barrel pyrolyser. Standard laboratory procedures were used to analyze pH, CEC, total carbon andnitrogen and exchangeable cations.Results The biochars were high in nutrients containing 4.17–18.15 g kg−1 N, 22.26–42.51 mg kg−1 P, 2.48–4.18 cmol kg−1K and pH 7.78–10.81 units. It is evident that adding biochar to acidic soil containing 0.79 g kg−1 N, 7.41 mg kg−1 P,1.42 cmol kg−1 K and pH of 5.68 could increase soil fertility and plant productivity. Carbon dioxide reduction potentialranged from 94.46 to 313.42 CO2eq kg−1. This implies that the concept and technique of producing biochar could be a valuableway of reducing carbon emissions into the atmosphere thereby mitigating climate change.Conclusion Crop wastes and by-products which constitute a nuisance could be used to produce a very useful by-product,biochar whose quality depends on the substrate from which it is produced. Recycling crop wastes to biochar is strongly recommendedto smallholder farmers for use in agriculture to improve fertility and crop productivity due to their high nutrientcontent and soil fertility attributes.

Keywords:

Biochar · Cassava · Carbon dioxide emissions · Coffee husk · Pyrolysis · Soil fertility

Authors

Samuel Fru Billa

School of Agriculture and Environmental Science, University of Dschang, P.O. Box ۲۲۲, Dschang, Cameroon- Institute of Agricultural Research for Development (IRAD), P.O. Box ۲۱۲۳, Yaoundé, Cameroon

Tsi Evaristus Angwafo

Department of Fundamental Sciences, University of Bamenda, Bambilli, P.O. Box ۳۹, Bamenda, Cameroon

Ajebesone Francis Ngome

Institute of Agricultural Research for Development (IRAD), P.O. Box ۲۱۲۳, Yaoundé, Cameroon