Rice crab coculture is a new ecological agriculture model combining rice cultivation and crab farming. Current research related to rice crab coculture only focuses on production theory and technical system establishment, while ignoring the potential ecological risk of Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon(PAHs) in rice crab coculture sediment. In this study, rice straw was used to make rice straw biochar to explore the performance and mech-anism of inhibiting release of phenanthrene(PHE) from rice-crab coculture sediments to overlying water with rice stalk biochar. The kinetic and isotherm adsorption data were best represented by the Langmuir model and pseudo-second-order model with a maximum adsorption capacity of 53.35 mg/g at 12 h contact time. The results showed that PHE was released from the rice-crab substrate to the overlying water in dissolved and particle forms as a result of bioturbation, and the PHE concentrations in dissolved and particle forms were 20.9 mu g/L and 14.22 mu g/L, respectively. This leads to secondary ecological risks in rice-crab co-culture systems. This is related to dissolved organic carbon(DOC) carrying the dissolved PHE and total suspended solids(TSS) carrying the particle PHE in the overlying water. Due to its large specific surface area, rice straw biochar is rich in functional groups, providing multiple hydrophobic adsorption sites. After adding rice straw biochar at 0.5 % w/w (dry weight) dose, the removal efficiency of dissolved and particulate PHE in the overlying water were 78.99 % and 42.11 %, respectively. Rice straw biochar is more competitively adsorbed PHE in the overlying water than TSS and DOC. The removal efficiency of PHE from the sediment was 52.75 %. This study confirmed that rice stalk biochar could effectively inhibit PHE migration and release in paddy sediment. It provides an environment-friendly in situ remediation method for the management of PAHs pollution from crab crops in rice fields.