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  • Agronomic benefits of biochar as a soil amendment after its use as waste water filtration medium.

Agronomic benefits of biochar as a soil amendment after its use as waste water filtration medium.

Environmental pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987) (2017-11-06)
Steffen Werner, Korbinian Kätzl, Marc Wichern, Andreas Buerkert, Christoph Steiner, Bernd Marschner
ABSTRACT

In many water-scarce countries, waste water is used for irrigation which poses a health risk to farmers and consumers. At the same time, it delivers nutrients to the farming systems. In this study, we tested the hypotheses that biochar can be used as a filter medium for waste water treatment to reduce pathogen loads. At the same time, the biochar is becoming enriched with nutrients and therefore can act as a fertilizer for soil amendment. We used biochar as a filter medium for the filtration of raw waste water and compared the agronomic effects of this "filterchar" (FC) and the untreated biochar (BC) in a greenhouse pot trial on spring wheat biomass production on an acidic sandy soil from Niger. The biochar filter showed the same removal of pathogens as a common sand filter (1.4 log units on average). We did not observe a nutrient accumulation in FC compared to untreated BC. Instead, P, Mg and K were reduced during filtration while N content remained unchanged. Nevertheless, higher biomass (Triticum L. Spp.) production in BC (+72%) and FC (+37%) treatments (20 t ha

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Sodium dichloroisocyanurate, 96%