Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4759585 | Forest Ecology and Management | 2017 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
Boreal forest stands fertilized with nitrogen (N) might be susceptible to elevated N leaching following clear-cutting, with consequences for water quality and soil acidification. Here, we studied a forest fertilization experiment with N, 165 Hagfors, in Sweden during the first six years (2006-2011) following clear-cutting. The N fertilization treatments were 0 kg haâ1 (0 N) and 450 kg haâ1 of N (450 N), supplied during 1981-1992 to a Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) stand: the stand was harvested in March 2006. Following clear-cutting, disc trenching was performed and furrows (F), ridges (R) and areas in-between two furrows (IB) were created. We calculated the N leaching fluxes and ecosystem N budget during 2006-2011 as affected by previous N fertilization, disc trenching and interactions thereof, at Hagfors by the use of a process-based biogeophysical ecosystem model (CoupModel). The model was calibrated against measurements of soil water and temperature dynamics and previously reported measurements of N in soil solution, soil organic matter and vegetation biomass. Criteria for acceptance of model estimates were based on the range enclosed by the 95% confidence intervals of the mean of the field data used in calibration sampled at low frequency (1-2 occasions) and a combination of the mean error and the coefficient of the determination for variables sampled at a higher frequency (28-1921 occasions). The accepted model estimates of the mean annual leaching rates of N were 3.1 (range 1.4-22.7) and 2.4 (range 0.8-7.0) kg haâ1 of N yearâ1 in the treatments 0 N and 450 N, respectively, without disc trenching. Disc trenching increased N leaching during the regeneration phase, more so in the 450 N treatment (mean 6.1, range 1.9-16.7 kg haâ1 of N yearâ1) than in the 0 N treatment (mean 4.6, range 1.9-12.9 kg haâ1 of N yearâ1). Overall, differences in the posterior model parameter estimates between N treatments and disc trenched treatments F, R and IB were related to the soil physical component: the differences resulted in enhanced drainage in the disc trenched treatments. We conclude that vegetation biomass N accumulation controlled soil water N leaching, and disc trenching increased N leaching from the previously N fertilized plots at Hagfors by its effects on water drainage flow and vegetation N uptake. This finding warrants more research since N fertilization followed by soil scarification in boreal forests is a practice which may increase in the future.
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Authors
M.O. Rappe George, L.J. Hansson, E. Ring, P.E. Jansson, A.I. Gärdenäs,