Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Species and Genotype Effects of Bioenergy Crops on Root Production, Carbon and Nitrogen in Temperate Agricultural Soil

Andrew S. Gregory, Jennifer A. J. Dungait, I. Shield, W. J. Macalpine, Jennifer Cunniff, Mark Durenkamp, R.P. White, A. Joynes, G. M. Richter

BioEnergy Research · 2018

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Summary

Bioenergy crops have a secondary benefit if they increase soil organic C (SOC) stocks through capture and allocation below-ground. The effects of four genotypes of short-rotation coppice willow (Salix spp., ‘Terra Nova’ and ‘Tora’) and Miscanthus (M. × giganteus (‘Giganteus’) and M. sinensis (‘Sinensis’)) on roots, SOC and total nitrogen (TN) were quantified to test whether below-ground biomass controls SOC and TN dynamics. Soil cores were collected under (‘plant’) and between plants (‘gap’) in a field experiment on a temperate agricultural silty clay loam after 4 and 6 years’ management. Root density was greater under Miscanthus for plant (up to 15.5 kg m−3) compared with gap (up to 2.7 kg m−3), whereas willow had lower densities (up to 3.7 kg m−3). Over 2 years, SOC increased below 0.2 m

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1007/s12155-018-9903-6
Catalogue ID
SNmoef28zp-3e1he7
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