In a comparison of 27-year-old Pinus radiata D. Don on a nitrogen deficient
coastal dune and growing with or without lupin plus fertiliser, mean wood
density, earlywood density, and latewood density in individual annual growt
h rings were significantly lower in treated as compared to control stands.
Latewood percentage showed a similar pattern of variation in relation to tr
eatment and tree age when the ring was laid down. Wood density and latewood
percentage increased radially from pith to bark, both increasing more rapi
dly in unfertilised compared to fertilised trees. Mean density, earlywood d
ensity, and latewood percentage were significantly related to tree nitrogen
status, as reflected by foliar analysis undertaken in the year rings were
laid down, and to ring age. Other foliar nutrients tested (P, K, Ca, Mg, B,
Mn, Zn, Cu) did not appear to influence wood density when analysed in the
presence of N.
Wood density was high at this trial site by New Zealand standards, even in
fertilised stands, which can be explained at least partly by the low foliar
N levels at Woodhill Forest. These exceeded 1.2% only in stands younger th
an 5 years old. Thereafter, foliar N decreased to approximate to1.2% in fer
tilised stands receiving 100 kg Nka of fertiliser annually for 10 years, an
d 0.8% in unfertilised controls. Foliar N levels on recent sands typically
fall in the range of 0.9-1.2% at Woodhill Forest, compared to 1.2 -->1.5% i
n most other soil types in NZ. Effective rainfall at Woodhill also tends to
be lower than other forest growing areas in New Zealand. At Woodhill, low
rainfall during autumn/winter/spring was associated with high latewood perc
entage and, hence, high ring mean density, while low summer rainfall had th
e opposite effects. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.