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Heterogeneous global crop yield response to biochar: a meta-regression analysis

TLDR
In this article, the authors employ meta-analytical, missing data, and semiparametric statistical methods to explain heterogeneity in crop yield responses across different soils, biochars, and agricultural management factors, and then estimate potential changes in yield across different soil environments globally.
Abstract
Biochar may contribute to climate change mitigation at negative cost by sequestering photosynthetically fixed carbon in soil while increasing crop yields. The magnitude of biochar's potential in this regard will depend on crop yield benefits, which have not been well-characterized across different soils and biochars. Using data from 84 studies, we employ meta-analytical, missing data, and semiparametric statistical methods to explain heterogeneity in crop yield responses across different soils, biochars, and agricultural management factors, and then estimate potential changes in yield across different soil environments globally. We find that soil cation exchange capacity and organic carbon were strong predictors of yield response, with low cation exchange and low carbon associated with positive response. We also find that yield response increases over time since initial application, compared to non-biochar controls. High reported soil clay content and low soil pH were weaker predictors of higher yield response. No biochar parameters in our dataset—biochar pH, percentage carbon content, or temperature of pyrolysis—were significant predictors of yield impacts. Projecting our fitted model onto a global soil database, we find the largest potential increases in areas with highly weathered soils, such as those characterizing much of the humid tropics. Richer soils characterizing much of the world's important agricultural areas appear to be less likely to benefit from biochar.

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Journal Article

Fate of soil applied black carbon: downward migration, leaching and soil respiration [Approved article]

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the fate of BC applied to a savanna Oxisol in Colombia at rates of 0, 11.6, 23.2 and 116.1 t BC ha -1, as well as its effect on non-BC soil organic C.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of biochar and biochar-compost in improving soil quality and crop performance: A review

TL;DR: In this article, a review of 634 publications on biochar and biochar-compost mixtures as soil amendments is presented to identify the potential gaps in our understanding of the role of these amendments in agriculture.
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Biochar boosts tropical but not temperate crop yields

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used 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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biochemical cycling of nitrogen and phosphorus in biochar-amended soils

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluate the soil biochemical cycling of N and P as influenced by biochars with diverse characteristics, and describe the consequences for plant nutrition with respect to the NUE and P use efficiency of crops grown in biochar-amended soils.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physical and chemical characterization of waste wood derived biochars.

TL;DR: Commercial available biochars derived from waste wood are characterized for physical and chemical properties that can signify their relevant environmental applications, with the highest PAHs observed in biochar produced via fast pyrolysis and lowest among the gasification-produced biochar.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Fast stable restricted maximum likelihood and marginal likelihood estimation of semiparametric generalized linear models

TL;DR: In this article, a Laplace approximation is used to obtain an approximate restricted maximum likelihood (REML) or marginal likelihood (ML) for smoothing parameter selection in semiparametric regression.
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The meta-analysis of response ratios in experimental ecology

TL;DR: The approximate sampling distribution of the log response ratio is given, why it is a particularly useful metric for many applications in ecology, and how to use it in meta-analysis are discussed.
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Generalized Additive Models

TL;DR: The class of generalized additive models is introduced, which replaces the linear form E fjXj by a sum of smooth functions E sj(Xj), and has the advantage of being completely auto- matic, i.e., no "detective work" is needed on the part of the statistician.
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