Table 1. Field experiments estimating biochar stability.
Study | Location (ecosystem) | Biochar source and application method | Study design | Biochar loss rate (years) |
Major et al. [48] | Colombia (savanna) | Charred mango wood disked into soil | Measured soil respiration and leaching for 2 years after biochar addition | MRT 3,624 |
Haefele et al. [58] | Thailand and the Philippines (rice paddies) | Charred rice husks tilled into soil | Measured biochar C for 3 years after biochar addition | MRT >1,000 |
Knoblauch et al. [51] | Los Baños, Philippines (rice paddies) | Charred rice husks tilled into soil | Measured soil CO2 and CH4 emissions for 3 months immediately and 2 years after biochar addition | MRT “several hundred if not thousands” |
Cheng et al. [68] | Eastern North America (various) | Collected from soils at historic charcoal furnaces | Compared C content of old charcoal to that of charcoal produced in reconstructed furnaces | 22% of biochar C lost in 130 |
Hammes et al. [47] | Russia (steppe) | Naturally-occurring fire | Measured black carbon stocks at a 100-year fire suppression site | Turnover time 293 |
Bird et al. [50] | Zimbabwe (savanna) | Naturally-occurring fire | Measured charcoal and oxidation-resistant elemental carbon (OREC) abundance at a 50-year fire suppression site | Half-life “considerably <50 years” (charcoal) and <100 years (OREC) |
Nguyen et al. [49] | Kenya (cropland) | Slash-and-burn conversion from forest to cropland | Measured black carbon stocks along a 100-year chronosequence | MRT 8.3 |
The locations, methods, and results of the seven experiments that measured or estimated biochar stability in a field setting. MRT is mean residence time. Assuming a steady decomposition rate, the results of Cheng et al. [68] imply a turnover time of 565 years. However, decomposition tends to slow over time, so turnover time is likely longer.