C. Kolling et al., MAGNESIUM-DEFICIENCY IN YOUNG NORWAY SPRUCE (PICEA-ABIES [L.] KARST.)TREES INDUCED BY NH4NO3 APPLICATION, Plant and soil, 195(2), 1997, pp. 283-291
Young Norway spruce trees were grown in 94 pots (2 per pot) on soil su
bstrate derived from granite with low Mg saturation and were fertilize
d with different amounts of NH4NO3 (in total 25, 61, and 97 kmol N ha(
-1)) over a period of four years, partly at an experimental station, p
artly at a high-elevation site in the Bavarian Forest. A fourth set of
trees received 9.4 kmol Mg ha(-1) in addition to 25 kmol N. Depending
on the treatment, needle chlorosis developed in the course of the exp
eriment. Improved light conditions after three years accelerated the y
ellowing process. The chlorotic Norway spruce trees showed a severe Mg
deficiency and an imbalanced N:Mg ratio. The shoot length increment,
the stem diameter, and the needle weights however were not influenced
by the fertilization. Excessive applications of NH4NO3 caused the subs
trate to become depleted of Mg. The successful experimental induction
of the characteristic tip yellowing of older needles of Norway spruce
growing on acidic soils at higher altitudes allowed hypotheses on the
causes and processes of this type of forest decline to be tested.