TOPSOIL PROPERTIES UNDER TUSSOCK GRASSLAND AND ADJOINING PINE FOREST IN OTAGO, NEW-ZEALAND

Authors
Citation
Mr. Davis, TOPSOIL PROPERTIES UNDER TUSSOCK GRASSLAND AND ADJOINING PINE FOREST IN OTAGO, NEW-ZEALAND, New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 37(4), 1994, pp. 465-469
Citations number
10
Categorie Soggetti
Agriculture,"Agriculture Dairy & AnumalScience
ISSN journal
00288233
Volume
37
Issue
4
Year of publication
1994
Pages
465 - 469
Database
ISI
SICI code
0028-8233(1994)37:4<465:TPUTGA>2.0.ZU;2-8
Abstract
Properties of topsoils collected from beneath a 10-year-old Pinus radi ata stand were compared with those of soil collected from beneath adja cent unplanted Chionochloa rigida grassland, at a paired catchment stu dy site in the Lammerlaw Range, Otago, South Island, New Zealand. In l ate summer, the soil moisture content was lower in the planted catchme nt than in the unplanted grassland, and the air-filled porosity of the poorly drained Waipori silt loam soil was greater in the planted catc hment. Soil bulk density and total porosity were similar in the two ca tchments. Soil pH and concentrations of total and organic phosphorus ( P) and extractable cations were lower in the planted catchment, wherea s levels of mineral and mineralisable nitrogen (N) and sulphate-sulphu r (SO4-S) were higher in the planted catchment. Inorganic and Bray-2 e xtractable P levels were similar in the two catchments. Physical and c hemical properties of soils collected from beneath tree crowns (0.5 m from the tree base) in the planted catchment were similar to those col lected from between tree rows (1.75 m from the tree base). The differe nces in chemical properties observed between catchments are attributed to increased nutrient uptake by the young pines, and to increased min eralisation of soil organic matter, which may have been promoted by im proved soil aeration under the pines. S concentrations in the foliage of tussocks persisting between tree rows in the planted catchment were 3 times those in the unplanted catchment, whereas concentrations of N , P, and Mg were almost double, indicating that the availability of th ese nutrients to tussocks was substantially higher in the planted catc hment.