Dh. Vanlear et Pr. Kapeluck, ABOVE AND BELOW-STUMP BIOMASS AND NUTRIENT CONTENT OF A MATURE LOBLOLLY-PINE PLANTATION, Canadian journal of forest research, 25(2), 1995, pp. 361-367
Above- and below-stump biomass and nutrient content were estimated for
a mature loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) plantation on an eroded site
in the upper Piedmont of South Carolina. Pine above-stump biomass was
144.9 t . ha(-1); below-stump biomass was 36.0 t . ha(-1), 20% of tota
l pine biomass. Total pine biomass was partitioned as 17% crown, 63% s
tem, and 20% roots. About 55% of below-stump biomass was in taproots a
nd 45% in lateral roots. Dominant and codominant trees had a greater p
roportion of below-stump biomass in lateral roots, indicating that lar
ger trees absorb a disproportionate quantity of the site's moisture an
d nutrients. Lateral roots contained 66 to 75% of below-stump nutrient
s. Fine roots (<0.6 cm diameter) accounted for 11% of below-stump biom
ass, but contained 24 to 30% of below-stump nutrients. Nutrient conten
t (kg . ha(-1)) of above-stump biomass ranked as follows: N 164.7, Ca
154.2, K 78.0, and P 14.0. Nitrogen was also the most abundant nutrien
t in below-stump biomass (60.2 kg . ha(-1)), followed by Ca (48.9 kg .
ha(-1)), K (41.2 kg . ha(-1)), Mg (11.1 kg . ha(-1)), and P (7.5 kg .
ha(-1)). Below-stump biomass contained 27, 35, 35, and 24% of total p
ine N, P, K, and Ca, respectively. Fine roots and foliage, only 4% of
total stand biomass, had about one-fourth of the stand's N and P.