Carbon mineralization dynamics of organic materials and their usage in the restoration of degraded tropical tea-growing soil

Understanding carbon mineralization dynamics of organic amendments is essential to restore degraded lands. This study focused on the restoration potentials of tea-growing soils using organic materials available in tea ecosystems. The Selangor-Briah soil series association (Typic Endoaquepts) consist...

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Main Authors: Liyanage, Mahesh, Sulaiman, Muhammad Firdaus, Ismail, Roslan, Gunaratne, Gamini Perera, Dharmakeerthi, Randombage Saman, Neranjani Rupasinghe, Minninga Geethika, Mayakaduwa, Amoda Priyangi, Musa, Mohamed Hanafi
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Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2021
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/96286/
https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/11/6/1191
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Institution: Universiti Putra Malaysia
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spelling my.upm.eprints.962862023-01-31T03:07:01Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/96286/ Carbon mineralization dynamics of organic materials and their usage in the restoration of degraded tropical tea-growing soil Liyanage, Mahesh Sulaiman, Muhammad Firdaus Ismail, Roslan Gunaratne, Gamini Perera Dharmakeerthi, Randombage Saman Neranjani Rupasinghe, Minninga Geethika Mayakaduwa, Amoda Priyangi Musa, Mohamed Hanafi Understanding carbon mineralization dynamics of organic amendments is essential to restore degraded lands. This study focused on the restoration potentials of tea-growing soils using organic materials available in tea ecosystems. The Selangor-Briah soil series association (Typic Endoaquepts) consisted of a high- (soil A) and a low-carbon (soil B) soils were incubated with different organic materials and released carbon dioxide (CO2) measured. Two kinetic models were applied to depict the mineralization process. Soil health parameters including microbial biomass carbon and nitrogen, dehydrogenase and catalase activities were determined to assess the restoration potentials. The parallel first-order kinetic model fitted well for all amendments. Gliricidia markedly enhanced the net cumulative CO2 flux in both soils. Charged biochar, tea waste and Gliricidia improved the microbial biomass carbon by 79–84% in soil A and 82–93% in soil B, respectively. Microbial quotients and biomass nitrogen were increased over 50 and 70% in amended soils, respectively. Dehydrogenase activity was significantly accelerated over 80% by compost, charged biochar and tea waste. Charged biochar remarkably increased the soil catalase activity by 141%. Microbial biomass, dehydrogenase and catalase activities, and cumulative CO2 flux were positively correlated (r > 0.452) with one another. The studied amendments showed greater potential in improving the soil quality, while charged biochar, raw biochar and compost enrich the soil recalcitrant C pool ensuring the soil health in long term. Even though biochar sequesters carbon, it has to be charged with nutrients to achieve the soil restoration goals. Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2021 Article PeerReviewed Liyanage, Mahesh and Sulaiman, Muhammad Firdaus and Ismail, Roslan and Gunaratne, Gamini Perera and Dharmakeerthi, Randombage Saman and Neranjani Rupasinghe, Minninga Geethika and Mayakaduwa, Amoda Priyangi and Musa, Mohamed Hanafi (2021) Carbon mineralization dynamics of organic materials and their usage in the restoration of degraded tropical tea-growing soil. Agronomy-Basel, 11 (6). pp. 1-18. ISSN 2073-4395 https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/11/6/1191 10.3390/agronomy11061191
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
description Understanding carbon mineralization dynamics of organic amendments is essential to restore degraded lands. This study focused on the restoration potentials of tea-growing soils using organic materials available in tea ecosystems. The Selangor-Briah soil series association (Typic Endoaquepts) consisted of a high- (soil A) and a low-carbon (soil B) soils were incubated with different organic materials and released carbon dioxide (CO2) measured. Two kinetic models were applied to depict the mineralization process. Soil health parameters including microbial biomass carbon and nitrogen, dehydrogenase and catalase activities were determined to assess the restoration potentials. The parallel first-order kinetic model fitted well for all amendments. Gliricidia markedly enhanced the net cumulative CO2 flux in both soils. Charged biochar, tea waste and Gliricidia improved the microbial biomass carbon by 79–84% in soil A and 82–93% in soil B, respectively. Microbial quotients and biomass nitrogen were increased over 50 and 70% in amended soils, respectively. Dehydrogenase activity was significantly accelerated over 80% by compost, charged biochar and tea waste. Charged biochar remarkably increased the soil catalase activity by 141%. Microbial biomass, dehydrogenase and catalase activities, and cumulative CO2 flux were positively correlated (r > 0.452) with one another. The studied amendments showed greater potential in improving the soil quality, while charged biochar, raw biochar and compost enrich the soil recalcitrant C pool ensuring the soil health in long term. Even though biochar sequesters carbon, it has to be charged with nutrients to achieve the soil restoration goals.
format Article
author Liyanage, Mahesh
Sulaiman, Muhammad Firdaus
Ismail, Roslan
Gunaratne, Gamini Perera
Dharmakeerthi, Randombage Saman
Neranjani Rupasinghe, Minninga Geethika
Mayakaduwa, Amoda Priyangi
Musa, Mohamed Hanafi
spellingShingle Liyanage, Mahesh
Sulaiman, Muhammad Firdaus
Ismail, Roslan
Gunaratne, Gamini Perera
Dharmakeerthi, Randombage Saman
Neranjani Rupasinghe, Minninga Geethika
Mayakaduwa, Amoda Priyangi
Musa, Mohamed Hanafi
Carbon mineralization dynamics of organic materials and their usage in the restoration of degraded tropical tea-growing soil
author_facet Liyanage, Mahesh
Sulaiman, Muhammad Firdaus
Ismail, Roslan
Gunaratne, Gamini Perera
Dharmakeerthi, Randombage Saman
Neranjani Rupasinghe, Minninga Geethika
Mayakaduwa, Amoda Priyangi
Musa, Mohamed Hanafi
author_sort Liyanage, Mahesh
title Carbon mineralization dynamics of organic materials and their usage in the restoration of degraded tropical tea-growing soil
title_short Carbon mineralization dynamics of organic materials and their usage in the restoration of degraded tropical tea-growing soil
title_full Carbon mineralization dynamics of organic materials and their usage in the restoration of degraded tropical tea-growing soil
title_fullStr Carbon mineralization dynamics of organic materials and their usage in the restoration of degraded tropical tea-growing soil
title_full_unstemmed Carbon mineralization dynamics of organic materials and their usage in the restoration of degraded tropical tea-growing soil
title_sort carbon mineralization dynamics of organic materials and their usage in the restoration of degraded tropical tea-growing soil
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2021
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/96286/
https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/11/6/1191
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