PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Biochar can either curb or boost greenhouse gas emissions depending on soil conditions, new study finds

2026-02-26
(Press-News.org) A new study reveals that biochar, a carbon rich material increasingly promoted for climate friendly agriculture, can have sharply different effects on greenhouse gas emissions depending on soil type and land use. The research shows that while biochar can significantly reduce nitrous oxide emissions in acidic upland soils, it may unexpectedly increase emissions in flooded rice paddies.

Nitrous oxide is one of the most potent greenhouse gases, with a warming effect far greater than carbon dioxide over the long term. Agricultural soils are a major source of these emissions, making mitigation strategies critical for climate and food system sustainability.

In the new study, researchers examined how biochar affects nitrous oxide production in two contrasting agricultural environments: acidic upland soils and flooded paddy soils. Using isotope analysis and microbial measurements, the team traced exactly which biological pathways were responsible for emissions.

The results showed that biochar reduced nitrous oxide emissions in acidic upland soils more effectively than lime treatments commonly used to adjust soil acidity. The reduction was linked to shifts in soil microbial activity. Biochar suppressed both bacterial and fungal processes that produce nitrous oxide while promoting genes associated with converting the gas into harmless nitrogen.

“Our findings suggest that biochar can help redirect microbial processes so that more nitrogen ends up as stable nitrogen gas rather than as a climate damaging emission,” said one of the study authors. “This highlights the potential of biochar as a targeted mitigation strategy in certain agricultural systems.”

However, the study also uncovered a contrasting outcome in flooded rice soils. In these waterlogged conditions, biochar stimulated several microbial pathways simultaneously, leading to a strong increase in nitrous oxide emissions. Instead of suppressing gas production, the added carbon and changes in soil chemistry appeared to energize microbial activity.

“This tells us that biochar is not a one size fits all solution,” the authors explained. “Its climate benefits depend strongly on where and how it is applied.”

The researchers emphasize that soil water conditions, organic matter content, and microbial communities all interact to determine how biochar influences nitrogen cycling. In upland soils, improved soil structure and carbon availability appeared to favor pathways that consume nitrous oxide. In contrast, flooded soils provided conditions where multiple nitrogen transformations intensified, amplifying emissions.

The study highlights the importance of understanding soil specific mechanisms before promoting large scale biochar use. Rather than assuming uniform benefits, the authors argue that climate mitigation strategies should be tailored to land use and soil type.

“By identifying the microbial pathways behind these emissions, we can begin to design smarter soil management practices,” the researchers noted. “This knowledge helps us move toward agriculture that supports both productivity and climate goals.”

The team concludes that future research should focus on field conditions, long term impacts, and practical application strategies. With better targeting, biochar could still play an important role in reducing agricultural greenhouse gases, but only when applied in the right context.

 

=== 

Journal Reference: Chu C, Elrys AS, Dai S, Wen T, Xu J, et al. 2026. Biochar's contrasting effects on N2O emissions in acidic upland and flooded paddy soils. Nitrogen Cycling 2: e009 doi: 10.48130/nc-0025-0021  

https://www.maxapress.com/article/doi/10.48130/nc-0025-0021  

=== 

About Nitrogen Cycling:
Nitrogen Cycling (e-ISSN 3069-8111) is a multidisciplinary platform for communicating advances in fundamental and applied research on the nitrogen cycle. It is dedicated to serving as an innovative, efficient, and professional platform for researchers in the field of nitrogen cycling worldwide to deliver findings from this rapidly expanding field of science.

Follow us on Facebook, X, and Bluesky. 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Nanobiochar emerges as a next generation solution for cleaner water, healthier soils, and resilient ecosystems

2026-02-26
A new scientific review points to nanobiochar, an engineered carbon material derived from biomass, as a promising solution for some of the world’s most pressing environmental challenges. By shrinking conventional biochar to the nanoscale, researchers have created a material with dramatically increased surface area, reactivity, and environmental functionality, opening new possibilities for soil improvement, water treatment, and climate resilience. Biochar has long been used to improve soil quality and capture carbon, but the new analysis shows that nanoscale versions ...

Study finds more parents saying ‘No’ to vitamin K, putting babies’ brains at risk

2026-02-26
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4:00 P.M. ET, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 2026 Highlights: A new review of research has found the number of parents refusing vitamin K injections for their newborns is on the rise. Vitamin K is an essential vitamin that is naturally low in newborns. Vitamin K at birth is needed to help blood to clot. It is not a vaccine. Babies who do not receive vitamin K at birth are at a higher risk of life-threatening brain bleeds and long-term disability. While vitamin K refusal remains low, less than 1%, the review found rates of refusal in Minnesota ...

Scientists develop new gut health measure that tracks disease

2026-02-26
Scientists have identified a new way to distinguish healthy guts from diseased ones and track how some illnesses progress by measuring how gut bacteria interact with one another. According to a study published in Science, a collaboration between scientists at Rutgers University, Universidad de Granada in Spain and Princeton University found that healthy and diseased gut microbiomes behave like two distinct ecological states, driven not by individual microbes but by how entire bacterial communities compete and cooperate. “Instead ...

Rice gene discovery could cut fertiliser use while protecting yields

2026-02-26
UNDER EMBARGO UNTIL 19:00 GMT / 14:00 ET THURSDAY 26 FEBRUARY 2026 Rice gene discovery could cut fertiliser use while protecting yields Researchers from the University of Oxford, Nanjing Agricultural University, and Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology (Chinese Academy of Sciences) have finally identified the master regulator in plants that balances root and shoot growth when nutrients are limited. In field trials, rice plants with an improved version of the gene had yield increases of up to 24%. The breakthrough, published today (26 February) in the prestigious ...

Jumping ‘DNA parasites’ linked to early stages of tumour formation

2026-02-26
A study published today in the journal Science reveals how jumping fragments of human DNA, a type of genetic parasite, destabilise the cancer genome. Unstable genomes are a fertile playground for cancer evolution, giving malignant cells more opportunities to grow, adapt and evade treatment.  The researchers analysed genome sequences from tumours with unusually high activity of LINE-1 (L1) elements, fragments of DNA which copy themselves and paste that copy into other locations within the genome.  Previously thought ...

Ultra-sensitive CAR T cells provide potential strategy to treat solid tumors

2026-02-26
Though CAR T cells have been effective against certain blood cancers, they have not been for solid tumors. Now, a new form of highly sensitive CAR T cells aims to overcome one of the biggest barriers in solid tumor immunotherapies – the way solid tumors lack a single, widely shared surface target. By engineering an ultra-sensitive receptor capable of detecting even the smallest amounts of the protein CD70, researchers report they were able to eradicate kidney, ovarian, and pancreatic tumors in preclinical models. The findings provide a potential strategy to treat a broad range of solid tumors. ...

Early Neanderthal-Human interbreeding was strongly sex biased

2026-02-26
When Neanderthals and ancient modern humans interbred, the pairings were mostly between male Neanderthals and female humans. This finding helps explain why Neanderthal ancestry present in most humans is unevenly distributed. Anatomically modern humans carry low levels of Neanderthal ancestry, but it is not evenly shared. When the genomes of Neanderthals and modern humans are compared, striking gaps known as “Neanderthal deserts” are revealed. These are large stretches of DNA in modern humans where Neanderthal genetic contributions are unusually rare. Such deserts appear across several chromosomes and are especially prominent on the X chromosome. According to Alexander Platt and ...

North American bird declines are widespread and accelerating in agricultural hotspots

2026-02-26
North American bird populations are not only declining, but they’re also shrinking faster with each passing year – particularly in regions shaped by intensive agriculture, according to a new study. Centuries of human impacts, including land use change, agricultural intensification, overexploitation, and pollution, have drastically reshaped the natural world, leading to population declines for many wildlife species worldwide. Although these declines are widely recognized, whether these losses are speeding up year over year, as well as the factors driving this potential acceleration, remain poorly understood. ...

Researchers recommend strategies for improved genetic privacy legislation

2026-02-26
U.S. policymakers addressing the public’s concerns about how genetic information could be used, in different insurance-related contexts, should consider several guiding questions, say authors of a new Policy Forum. Comprehensive genetic testing for both consumer and clinical use has led to the rise of genetic privacy laws like the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA), which bars health insurers and employers from using genetic information. As that 2008 Act was limited to health insurance, however, numerous states have since enacted bans on the discriminatory use of genetic information by other kinds of insurance (life, long-term care, ...

How birds achieve sweet success

2026-02-26
Anyone who has seen a hummingbird poking her beak deep into a trumpet creeper blossom, or a honeyeater using its brush-tipped tongue to extract nectar from eucalyptus flowers, has witnessed something that from a human perspective is rather remarkable. Although many bird species avoid sugar-rich foods, others survive almost entirely on sugar-rich nectar or fruit, processing massive sugar loads without developing the diseases that such diets cause in people and other animals. Groups including hummingbirds, sunbirds, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Nanoplastics can interact with Salmonella to affect food safety, study shows

Eric Moore, M.D., elected to Mayo Clinic Board of Trustees

NYU named “research powerhouse” in new analysis

New polymer materials may offer breakthrough solution for hard-to-remove PFAS in water

Biochar can either curb or boost greenhouse gas emissions depending on soil conditions, new study finds

Nanobiochar emerges as a next generation solution for cleaner water, healthier soils, and resilient ecosystems

Study finds more parents saying ‘No’ to vitamin K, putting babies’ brains at risk

Scientists develop new gut health measure that tracks disease

Rice gene discovery could cut fertiliser use while protecting yields

Jumping ‘DNA parasites’ linked to early stages of tumour formation

Ultra-sensitive CAR T cells provide potential strategy to treat solid tumors

Early Neanderthal-Human interbreeding was strongly sex biased

North American bird declines are widespread and accelerating in agricultural hotspots

Researchers recommend strategies for improved genetic privacy legislation

How birds achieve sweet success

More sensitive cell therapy may be a HIT against solid cancers

Scientists map how aging reshapes cells across the entire mammalian body

Hotspots of accelerated bird decline linked to agricultural activity

How ancient attraction shaped the human genome

NJIT faculty named Senior Members of the National Academy of Inventors

App aids substance use recovery in vulnerable populations

College students nationwide received lifesaving education on sudden cardiac death

Oak Ridge National Laboratory launches the Next-Generation Data Centers Institute

Improved short-term sea level change predictions with better AI training

UAlbany researchers develop new laser technique to test mRNA-based therapeutics

New water-treatment system removes nitrogen, phosphorus from farm tile drainage

Major Canadian study finds strong link between cannabis, anxiety and depression

New discovery of younger Ediacaran biota

Lymphovenous bypass: Potential surgical treatment for Alzheimer's disease?

When safety starts with a text message

[Press-News.org] Biochar can either curb or boost greenhouse gas emissions depending on soil conditions, new study finds