N uptake and N status in ponderosa pine as affected by soil compaction and forest floor removal |
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Authors: | Gomez Armando G Powers Robert F Singer Michael J Horwath William R |
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Institution: | (1) Programa Forestal, Colegio de Postgraduados, Km 35 Carr, Mexico-Texcoco, Montecillo-Chapingo, CP 56230, México;(2) Soils and Biogeochemistry, University of California, Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA;(3) Pacific Southwest Research Station, 2400 Washington Avenue, Redding, CA 96001, USA |
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Abstract: | Soil compaction and forest floor removal influence fundamental soil processes that control forest productivity and sustainability. We investigated effects of soil compaction and forest floor removal on tree growth, N uptake and N status in ponderosa pine. Factorial combinations of soil compaction (non-compacted and compacted) and forest floor removal (forest floor present and no forest floor) were applied to three different surface soil textures. For studying N uptake, four trees from every treatment were 15N labeled with 130.6 mg m–2 of 15N. Tree responses to compaction were dependent on the forest floor removal level. In loam and clay soils, non-compacted+no forest floor was beneficial to tree growth. Tree growth was depressed with compaction+no forest floor in clay soil. In sandy loam soil, compaction+no forest floor showed the best tree growth. No N deficiency was found in any soil type but a graphical method suggested correlation between N status and tree growth. In loam and clay soils, compaction+forest floor present increased N uptake. Nitrogen uptake was explained significantly by potential N mineralization in loam and clay soils. In sandy loam soil, the effects of compaction and forest floor removal were more complex, with the N uptake improved in the compaction+no forest floor treatment and reduced under compaction+forest floor present. Soil compaction may have influenced N tracer uptake because of improved unsaturated flow and root-soil contact. However, N immobilization may have restricted N uptake in compaction+forest floor present in the sandy loam soil. The study illustrates how soil properties and site preparation can potentially interact to affect N dynamics and forest productivity. |
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Keywords: | forest productivity forest soils nutrient uptake soil disturbances tree growth |
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