Frédéric Rees
University of Lorraine
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Publication
Featured researches published by Frédéric Rees.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2016
Hans Jörg Bachmann; Thomas D. Bucheli; Alba Dieguez-Alonso; Daniele Fabbri; Heike Knicker; Hans-Peter Schmidt; Axel Ulbricht; Roland Becker; Alessandro Buscaroli; Diane Buerge; Andrew Cross; Dane Dickinson; Akio Enders; Valdemar I. Esteves; Michael W.H. Evangelou; Guido Fellet; K. Friedrich; Gabriel Gasco Guerrero; Bruno Glaser; Ulrich Michael Hanke; Kelly Hanley; Isabel Hilber; Dimitrios Kalderis; Jens Leifeld; Ondrej Masek; Jan Mumme; Marina Paneque Carmona; Roberto Calvelo Pereira; Frédéric Rees; Alessandro G. Rombolà
Biochar produced by pyrolysis of organic residues is increasingly used for soil amendment and many other applications. However, analytical methods for its physical and chemical characterization are yet far from being specifically adapted, optimized, and standardized. Therefore, COST Action TD1107 conducted an interlaboratory comparison in which 22 laboratories from 12 countries analyzed three different types of biochar for 38 physical-chemical parameters (macro- and microelements, heavy metals, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, pH, electrical conductivity, and specific surface area) with their preferential methods. The data were evaluated in detail using professional interlaboratory testing software. Whereas intralaboratory repeatability was generally good or at least acceptable, interlaboratory reproducibility was mostly not (20% < mean reproducibility standard deviation < 460%). This paper contributes to better comparability of biochar data published already and provides recommendations to improve and harmonize specific methods for biochar analysis in the future.
Chemosphere | 2016
Frédéric Rees; Thibault Sterckeman; Jean Louis Morel
Biochar may be used as an amendment in contaminated soils in phytoremediation processes. The mechanisms controlling plant metal uptake in biochar-amended soils remain however unclear. This work aimed at evaluating the influence of biochar on root development and its consequence on plant metal uptake, for two non-hyperaccumulating plants (Zea mays and Lolium perenne) and one hyperaccumulator of Cd and Zn (Noccaea caerulescens). We conducted rhizobox experiments using one acidic and one alkaline soil contaminated with Cd, Pb and Zn. Biochar was present either homogeneously in the whole soil profile or localized in specific zones. A phenomenon of root proliferation specific to biochar-amended zones was seen on the heterogeneous profiles of the acidic soil and interpreted by a decrease of soil phytotoxicity in these zones. Biochar amendments also favored root growth in the alkaline soil as a result of the lower availability of certain nutrients in the amended soil. This increase of root surface led to a higher accumulation of metals in roots of Z.mays in the acidic soil and in shoots of N. caerulescens in the alkaline soil. In conclusion, biochar can have antagonist effects on plant metal uptake by decreasing metal availability, on one hand, and by increasing root surface and inducing root proliferation, on the other hand.
Journal of Environmental Engineering and Landscape Management | 2016
Priit Tammeorg; Ana Catarina Bastos; Simon Jeffery; Frédéric Rees; Juergen Kern; Ellen R. Graber; Maurizio Ventura; M.G. Kibblewhite; António Amaro; Alice Budai; C.M.d.S. Cordovil; Xavier Domene; Ciro Gardi; G. Gascó; Ján Horák; Claudia Kammann; Elena Kondrlova; David A. Laird; Susana Loureiro; Martinho António Santos Martins; Pietro Panzacchi; Munoo Prasad; Marija Prodana; Aline Peregrina Puga; Greet Ruysschaert; Lidia Sas-Paszt; F. Silva; Wenceslau Geraldes Teixeira; Giustino Tonon; Gemini Delle Vedove
Key priorities in biochar research for future guidance of sustainable policy development have been identified by expert assessment within the COST Action TD1107. The current level of scientific understanding (LOSU) regarding the consequences of biochar application to soil were explored. Five broad thematic areas of biochar research were addressed: soil biodiversity and ecotoxicology, soil organic matter and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, soil physical properties, nutrient cycles and crop production, and soil remediation. The highest future research priorities regarding biochar’s effects in soils were: functional redundancy within soil microbial communities, bioavailability of biochar’s contaminants to soil biota, soil organic matter stability, GHG emissions, soil formation, soil hydrology, nutrient cycling due to microbial priming as well as altered rhizosphere ecology, and soil pH buffering capacity. Methodological and other constraints to achieve the required LOSU are discussed and options for efficient progress of biochar research and sustainable application to soil are presented.
European Journal of Soil Science | 2014
Frédéric Rees; Marie-Odile Simonnot; Jean Louis Morel
Plant and Soil | 2015
Frédéric Rees; Cyril Germain; Thibault Sterckeman; Jean Louis Morel
Environmental Geochemistry and Health | 2017
Weihua Zhang; Xinchen Huang; Yanming Jia; Frédéric Rees; Daniel C.W. Tsang; Rongliang Qiu; Hong Wang
Hydrometallurgy | 2017
Claire Hazotte; Baptiste Laubie; Frédéric Rees; Jean Louis Morel; Marie-Odile Simonnot
Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2017
Frédéric Rees; Adrien Dhyèvre; Jean Louis Morel; Sylvie Cotelle
Geoderma | 2019
Frédéric Rees; Robin Dagois; Delphine Derrien; Jean-Louis Fiorelli; Françoise Watteau; Jean-Louis Morel; Christophe Schwartz; Marie-Odile Simonnot; Geoffroy Séré
Journal of Geochemical Exploration | 2018
Marie Rue; Frédéric Rees; Marie-Odile Simonnot; Jean-Louis Morel