LIMITATIONS OF BIOASSAYS FOR MONITORING FOREST SOIL PRODUCTIVITY - RATIONALE AND EXAMPLE

Authors
Citation
Ja. Burger, LIMITATIONS OF BIOASSAYS FOR MONITORING FOREST SOIL PRODUCTIVITY - RATIONALE AND EXAMPLE, Soil Science Society of America journal, 60(6), 1996, pp. 1674-1678
Citations number
14
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture Soil Science
ISSN journal
03615995
Volume
60
Issue
6
Year of publication
1996
Pages
1674 - 1678
Database
ISI
SICI code
0361-5995(1996)60:6<1674:LOBFMF>2.0.ZU;2-#
Abstract
Sustaining forest soil productivity is a common goal of forest landown ers in the Southeast, but determining the effects of forest management practices on soil and site quality has not been easy, An unbiased mea surement is needed to monitor sustained soil and site productivity. Gr owth cycle comparisons, traditional measures of forest productivity, a re not very timely, are often biased, and do not always account for ch anges in soil quality due to management. This was demonstrated by comp aring growth curves of two successive loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) r otations, and by comparing growth curves influenced by two site prepar ation treatments within the last rotation. The growth cycle comparison between rotations was not a definitive indicator of sustained soil qu ality because stand response could have been confounded by differences in genotype and vegetation management from the first to the second ro tation. Stand responses due to soil treatment in the last rotation wer e confounded by the influence of different levels of competing vegetat ion, Because stand response is a function of many confounding non-soil factors as well as soil quality, soil sustainability and the effects of management should be determined by measuring soil properties and pr ocesses directly.