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Title The productivity effects of macroalgal biochar from Ulva (Linnaeus) bloom species on Arabidopsis thaliana (Linnaeus) seedlings
ID_Doc 26947
Authors Kenneth, F; Joniver, CFH; Meredith, W; Adams, JMM
Title The productivity effects of macroalgal biochar from Ulva (Linnaeus) bloom species on Arabidopsis thaliana (Linnaeus) seedlings
Year 2023
Published European Journal Of Phycology, 58, 3
DOI 10.1080/09670262.2022.2103739
Abstract Intensive agricultural practices and poor management of organic waste have adverse effects on aquatic ecosystems, where excessive macroalgal proliferation can occur to form 'green tides', with negative environmental, ecological and socioeconomic impacts. One novel method for converting a problematic material into a valuable resource is to use excess algal biomass as a feedstock for biochar production. With a high elemental composition, such a resource might be suitable to redress soil deficiencies and to ameliorate soil fertility. Green macroalgae from the Ulva genus, in bladed (predominantly U. rigida), tubular (predominantly U. prolifera) and mixed morphological (U. rigida and U. prolifera) phenotypes, were used to produce biochars. A pot trial within a controlled-environment chamber was carried out to determine the effects of amending high- and low-fertilizer compost with algal biochars (applied at 0, 0.5, 1, 2 and 5% w/w) on the growth rate of Arabidopsis thaliana. A commercial wood-based biochar was used under similar treatments as a control. Weekly imaging and final harvest weights provided additional growth data; composition data including ultimate and proximate analyses, pH, Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) surface area and hydropyrolysis of the dried macroalgae and algal biochars were also conducted. Significant enhanced growth in seedlings grown with biochar amendment were not observed in high- or low-fertilizer compost, and the addition of algal biochars at 5% w/w to high-fertilizer soil significantly reduced plant growth. Elemental analysis revealed that the algal biochars contained high quantities of alkaline elements including sodium. It was hypothesised that salinity was the primary factor affecting plant growth at higher biochar application rates, despite the algae being sourced from an estuarine environment. Biochar provenance and composition is highly significant: using the catch-all term 'biochar' ignores both the range of materials and composition that could be used to create it and its subsequent impact within the soil.
Author Keywords Algae; biochar; chlorophytes; circular economy; estuary; eutrophication; growth; seaweed; soil amendment; soil fertility
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
EID WOS:000843584400001
WoS Category Plant Sciences; Marine & Freshwater Biology
Research Area Plant Sciences; Marine & Freshwater Biology
PDF https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/file/10364394/1/%09%20EJP%20-%20Algal%20biochar
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