Ba. Olsson, Effects of biomass removal in thinnings and compensatory fertilization on exchangeable base cation pools in acid forest soils, FOREST ECOL, 122(1-2), 1999, pp. 29-39
The effects of whole-tree harvesting and fertilization at first thinning on
the exchangeable pools of base cations in the soil were examined on four s
ites five years after thinning. One site with Norway spruce (Picea abies (L
.) Karst.) is located in southwestern Sweden and three other sites with Sco
ts pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) are located in southeastern, south-central an
d northern Sweden. On all sites, the stands were thinned, and the following
treatments were applied in a randomized block design (n = 3). (i) stem-onl
y harvest, logging residues left on site; (ii) whole-tree harvesting; (iii)
whole-tree harvesting combined with compensatory fertilization (N-P-K were
applied one year after thinning in the form of inorganic fertilizers, and
the amounts were equal to the nutrient content of the harvested logging res
idues); (iv) stem-only harvesting in combination with N (pine sites) or NP
(spruce site) fertilization (ammonium nitrate, 150 kg N ha(-1), superphosph
ate, 30 kg P ha(-1)) and (v) whole-tree harvesting and nitrogen fertilizati
on as in treatment (iv).
There were no general treatment effects revealed from analysis across all s
ites. Effects of harvesting intensity were detected on two sites. indicatin
g reduced pools of exchangeable K, Mg and Ca after whole-tree harvesting. T
he reductions were less pronounced than the effects observed in other studi
es from experiments with whole-tree harvesting at clear-felling of mature f
orests. Effects of application of nitrogen alone were more frequently obser
ved than effects of harvesting of logging residues. In most cases, base cat
ion pools were lower after N treatment than after other treatments, and thi
s effect was probably due to exchange and translocation phenomena. However,
Ca pools had increased after NP treatment on the spruce site due to high c
ontent of Ca in P fertilizer. No effect of compensatory fertilization with
N-P-K was detected. A comparison between exchangeable nutrient pools before
thinning and five years after indicated that K was generally lost from the
soil profile. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.