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Journal of Integrative Agriculture
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Biochar induced trade-offs and synergies between ecosystem services and crop productivity
Jinxia Wang, Qiu Huang, Kai Peng, Dayang Yang, Guozhen Wei, Yunfei Ren, Yixuan Wang, Xiukang Wang, Nangia Vinay, Shikun Sun, Yanming Yang, Fei Mo
2024, 23 (
11
): 3882-3895. DOI:
10.1016/j.jia.2024.03.022
Abstract
(
79
)
PDF in ScienceDirect
Biochar amendment offers a chance for sustainable agriculture. However, the effectiveness of biochar relies on its physical and chemical properties, which are heavily affected by biochar production conditions and management practices. Therefore, substantial uncertainties regarding the use of biochar exist in agricultural systems globally. This study provides the first quantitative evaluation of the impacts of biochar characteristics and management practices on key ecosystem services by performing a second-order meta-analysis based on 34,628 paired observations in biochar-amended and unamended systems. Overall, biochar enhances phytotoxicity alleviation, physiology regulation, soil remediation and carbon sequestration, and microbial functional gene abundance. However, some prominent trade-offs exist between crop productivity and ecosystem service deliveries including for nutrient cycling, microbial function, climate change mitigation, and the soil microbial community). The adoption of low C:N biochar produced at high pyrolysis temperatures from sewage sludge-derived feedstock, in combination with a moderate application rate and inorganic fertilizer input, shows potential for achieving synergistic promotion of crop productivity and ecosystem services. These outcomes highlight the need for judicious implementation of biochar-based solutions to site-specific soil constraints. The quantified synergy and tradeoff relationships will aid the establishment of a sustainable biochar development framework that strengthens necessary ecosystem services commensurate with food security assurance.
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Brassinosteroids improve the redox state of wheat florets under low-nitrogen stress and alleviate degeneration
Zimeng Liang, Juan Li, Jingyi Feng, Zhiyuan Li, Vinay Nangia, Fei Mo, Yang Liu
DOI:
10.1016/j.jia.2024.03.035
Online: 08 April 2024
Abstract
(
51
)
PDF in ScienceDirect
Reducing nitrogen application rates can mitigate issues such as environmental degradation and resource wastage. However, it can also exacerbate problems such as wheat floret degeneration, leading to reduced yields. Therefore, investigating wheat floret degeneration mechanisms under low nitrogen stress and identifying mitigation measures are conducive to achieving high yields and sustainable development. To investigate the physiological mechanism of low nitrogen stress affecting wheat floret degradation and whether exogenous brassinosteroids can alleviate this stress, three nitrogen application rates (N0, no nitrogen application; N1, 120 kg ha
-
1
pure nitrogen; and N2, 240 kg ha
-1
pure nitrogen) and exogenous spraying experiments (N0CK, no nitrogen with water spraying; N0BR, no nitrogen with 24-epibrassinolide (an active brassinosteroids) spraying; and N1, 120 kg ha
-1
pure nitrogen with water spraying) were designed. The results indicated that low nitrogen stress induced a large amount of reactive oxygen species generation. Although wheat spikes synthesized flavonoids to combat oxidative stress, their energy metabolism (glycolysis and tricarboxylic acid cycle) and ascorbate-glutathione cycle were inhibited, keeping reactive oxygen levels elevated within the spike, inducing cell death and exacerbating floret degeneration. Furthermore, brassinosteroids played a role in regulating wheat floret degeneration under low-nitrogen stress. Exogenous foliar spraying of 24-epibrassinolide promoted energy metabolism and the ascorbate-glutathione cycle within the spike, enhancing energy charge and effectively mitigating a portion of reactive oxygen induced by low nitrogen stress, thereby alleviating floret degeneration caused by low nitrogen stress. In summary, low-nitrogen stress disrupts the redox homeostasis of wheat spikes, leading to floret degeneration. Brassinosteroids alleviate floret degeneration by improving the redox state of wheat spikes. This research provides theoretical support for balancing the contradiction between high yields and sustainable development and is beneficial for the application of low nitrogen in production.
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