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Phosphorus (P) deficiency is one of the main constraints on crop production in Arenosols (acid sandy soil).The high cost of P fertilizers may represent an insurmountable obstacle in many poor countries,leaving the exploitation of their own calcareous and phosphate rocks as the only low-cost and long-term alternative.Biochar is suggested to have positive effects on soil properties;however,there is no published research on the synergistic effects of biochar and rocky materials in modifying soil properties.The aim of this study was to investigate the chemical and biochemical responses of an acid Arenosol treated with phosphate rock (PR),calcareous rock (CR),and biochar (BC),and the implications for corn yield.A soil from Marracuene District,Mozambique was used,where corn was grown for 90 d with the soil treated with: no addition (control),water-soluble zinc phosphite fertilizer (WSP),PR,WSP+CR,WSP+BC,WSP+CR+BC,PR+BC,and PR+CR+BC.Biochar was produced by pyrolysis of babycorn peels for 4 h at 450 ℃ and applied at 11 g kg-1.The soil pHH2O increased from about 4.54 in the control to 7.38 in the PR+CR+BC treatment.Easily oxidizable organic carbon,cation exchange capacity,and available P were higher in the treatments containing BC than in the control.The treatments containing CR and/or BC led to the highest activities of alkaline phosphomonoesterase,phosphodiesterase,and α-glucosidase,which increased P availability and gave the greatest biomass and yields.We suggest that biochar provides additional soluble P and supplies adsorption sites for phosphate,preventing its evolution to unavailable forms.Thus,PR applied together with BC contributed to an 840% yield increase compared to the control.The treatments containing WSP and BC facilitated phosphite oxidation to phosphate and increased crop yield.