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Post-thinning density and fertilization affect Pinus taeda stand and individual tree growth

Authors :
Harold E. Burkhart
Thomas R. Fox
Rafael Rubilar
Rachel L. Cook
Timothy J. Albaugh
Ralph L. Amateis
Source :
Forest Ecology and Management. 396:207-216
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2017.

Abstract

We installed a thinning and fertilization study at five sites in mid-rotation Pinus taeda L. stands in the southeastern United States to examine treatment effects on diameter growth, basal area production, and volume increment. The treatments were four levels of post-thinning stand density (247, 494, 741 and 1235 stems ha −1 ) and two levels of fertilization (none and 224 and 28 kg ha −1 of elemental nitrogen and phosphorus, respectively), applied in four replications at each site using either a randomized complete block (3 sites) or a split plot (2 sites) design. Six years after treatment, thinning significantly increased diameter and diameter increment as the residual density level decreased and increased stand basal area, stand basal area increment, stand volume and stand volume increment as residual density level increased at all sites. Fertilizer significantly increased diameter and stand basal area increments at two sites and stand volume increment at one site; these sites had low initial leaf area index, a metric commonly used to assess the potential for response to fertilization. Diameter increment increased as initial diameter class increased. Larger trees grew faster than smaller trees at all sites and for all treatments. Diameter growth decreased as initial stand basal area increased, and fertilization significantly increased diameter growth for a given level of initial stand basal area at sites where fertilization affected diameter growth. Stand volume increment increased as diameter increment increased for crop trees (largest 247 stems ha −1 ), whereas stand volume increment decreased as diameter increment increased for all trees. The stand-scale ‘cost’ for greater individual-tree diameter growth was a reduction in stand volume increment in the 247 stems ha −1 treatment; this reduction was 13 m 3 ha −1 yr −1 across all sites compared with the 1235 stems ha −1 treatment, whereas the individual tree diameter growth ‘benefit’ was 0.9 cm yr −1 when comparing these same treatments. Trade-offs were quantified between individual tree size and stand growth across the thinning and fertilization levels imposed in this study, which will be useful in empirical and process-based modeling efforts for predicting thinning and fertilization responses of P. taeda .

Details

ISSN :
03781127
Volume :
396
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Forest Ecology and Management
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........07ac4814b41f440d02a74a0208c11ab4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2017.04.030