Abstract
Renewable materials including coir, biochar, and composts are investigated worldwide in the horticultural industry to partially substitute peat in growing media. In this study, we assessed the effects of biochar and vermicompost as partial substitution of peat and compared these peat-based growing media with coir in terms of NH4+-N and NO3−-N content, CO2-C and N2 O-N emissions and their microbial biomass carbon and nitrogen. Six growing media mixtures (peat; peat + biochar 9:1 v/v; peat + vermicompost 9:1 v/v; coir; coir + biochar 9:1 v/v; coir + vermicompost 9:1 v/v) replicated three times were incubated in growth chambers during a 60 d period. At day 0 of incubation (DAI), peat amended with biochar retained around 12.81% of NH4+-N compared with peat alone. The concentrations of NO3−-N peaked at 275 mg·kg−1 at 33 DAI for peat and 552 mg·kg−1 at 46 DAI for coir amended with vermicompost. The substitution of peat with biochar resulted in large CO2-C [2070 μg CO2-C·g−1 dry weight (DW)] and N2 O-N (62.78 μg N2 O-N·g−1 DW) emissions, but not coir. The substitution of coir with vermicompost increased N2O-N emissions at a much lower level (47.53 μg N2O-N·g−1 DW) than peat (111.82 μg N2O-N·g−1 DW). Our results showed that supplements of vermicompost in peat and coir improved N supply which could benefit plant growth, while substituting part of peat with biochar increased CO2-C and N2 O-N emissions. In contrast, no effect of biochar was observed with coir, which is beneficial for the environmental footprint of short-cycle growing crops.
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Messiga, A. J., Hao, X., Ziadi, N., & Dorais, M. (2020). Reducing peat in growing media: impact on nitrogen content, microbial activity, and CO2 and N2 O emissions. Canadian Journal of Soil Science, 102(1), 77–87. https://doi.org/10.1139/cjss-2020-0147
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