Long-term trends in loblolly pine productivity and stand characteristics in response to thinning and fertilization in the West Gulf region
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
4-19-2004
Abstract
Two levels each of thinning and fertilization were applied to a 7-year-old loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) plantation on a nitrogen- and phosphorus-deficient West Gulf Coastal Plain site in Louisiana. Levels of thinning were no thinning, or thinning applied 7 and 14 years after stand initiation. Levels of fertilization were no fertilization or broadcast fertilization with diammonium phosphate at age 7 years plus refertilization with urea, monocalcium phosphate, and potash at age 14 years. Long-term measurements of climate, stand development and productivity, projected leaf area index, and foliar nutrition were initiated at age 11 years. We found that by age 17 years, thinning increased mean live-crown length from 4.2 to 7.8m, and mean tree diameter from 15.0 to 21.8cm compared to the unthinned treatment. After rethinning at age 14 years, stand basal area increased 1.2 and 19.2% between ages 15 and 17 years on the unthinned and thinned plots, respectively. Refertilization at age 14 years reestablished foliar N, P and K sufficiency, which increased leaf area index from 4.2 to 6.0m2m-2 on the unthinned plots and from 3.2 to 3.8m2m-2 on the thinned plots, and subsequently, increased gross stand biomass from 114 to 141Mgha-1 on the unthinned plots and from 78 to 95Mgha-1 on the thinned plots by age 17 years. Leaf area was an important factor controlling loblolly pine productivity. At our study site, however, competition for light and water and nutrition-limited foliage growth influenced the variability and scope of this relationship. Our results suggest that a positive and linear relationship between leaf area and loblolly pine productivity does not universally occur on loblolly pine sites. © 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Forest Ecology and Management
First Page
71
Last Page
96
Recommended Citation
Sword Sayer, M., Goelz, J., Chambers, J., Tang, Z., Dean, T., Haywood, J., & Leduc, D. (2004). Long-term trends in loblolly pine productivity and stand characteristics in response to thinning and fertilization in the West Gulf region. Forest Ecology and Management, 192 (1), 71-96. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2004.01.006