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International Journal of Agriculture and Food Science
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Vol. 7, Issue 10, Part B (2025)

Synergistic effects of biochar and organic amendments on soil fertility and crop productivity: A critical review

Author(s):

Conficious Nkrumah, Hannah Addai Boahemaa, Prosper Ntow, Gladys Alabilla, Paul Laari, Gloria Naa Lamiley Lamptey, Akwasi Agyapong Oppong-Agyemang, James Nii Armah Okine and Benjamin Konyannik Yennuna

Abstract:

Soil degradation affects approximately two billion hectares globally, threatening agricultural productivity and food security. This critical review synthesizes current knowledge on the synergistic effects of combining biochar with organic amendments (compost, farmyard manure, crop residues) for enhancing soil fertility and crop productivity. Evidence demonstrates that co-application consistently outperforms single amendments through multiple mechanisms. Chemically, combined treatments improve pH buffering (particularly in acidic soils), significantly enhance cation exchange capacity, and improve nutrient retention while reducing nitrogen leaching. Physically, they improve soil aggregation and water-holding capacity, especially in coarse-textured soils. Biologically, microbial biomass increases by up to 85%, with enhanced enzymatic activity facilitating nutrient cycling. These improvements translate to significant agronomic benefits, with crop yield increases ranging from 20% to 85%, particularly in degraded tropical soils where fertility constraints are most acute. The synergistic approach also offers environmental advantages through carbon sequestration and greenhouse gas mitigation, with biochar providing stable carbon storage while reducing nitrous oxide emissions. However, effectiveness remains context-dependent, influenced by soil type, climate conditions, and crop species. Methodological limitations in current research including inconsistent pyrolysis details (unreported in over 40% of studies), variable application rates, and short study durations (68% lasting one season or less) highlight the need for standardized protocols and long-term field monitoring. For successful implementation, regionally adapted strategies matching amendment characteristics to specific soil constraints are essential, alongside consideration of socioeconomic factors affecting farmer adoption. This integrated approach shows transformative potential for restoring degraded soils while enhancing agricultural sustainability.

Pages: 62-78  |  97 Views  47 Downloads


International Journal of Agriculture and Food Science
How to cite this article:
Conficious Nkrumah, Hannah Addai Boahemaa, Prosper Ntow, Gladys Alabilla, Paul Laari, Gloria Naa Lamiley Lamptey, Akwasi Agyapong Oppong-Agyemang, James Nii Armah Okine and Benjamin Konyannik Yennuna. Synergistic effects of biochar and organic amendments on soil fertility and crop productivity: A critical review. Int. J. Agric. Food Sci. 2025;7(10):62-78. DOI: https://doi.org/10.33545/2664844X.2025.v7.i10b.854
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