Pine plantations keep soil fertile
Mature pine plantations keep soil fertility as least as high as in
neighbouring areas of native forest, according to new research by CSIRO Forestry
and Forest Products.
"The soils under pines have been found to store as much carbon as pasture
soils. This suggests that replacing pasture with pine plantations will not lead
to a long-term reduction in soil carbon or a large net release of carbon to the
atmosphere with adverse greenhouse effects, as some feared," says CSIRO's Dr
Clive Carlyle, who leads the research.
The findings come from research by CSIRO and the Queensland Forest Research
Institute in the 'Green Triangle' - a concentrated area of mostly pine
plantations centered on Mt Gambier, SA, and near Gympie, Qld.
For the pine/native forest comparisons, researchers selected about 20 sites
where plantations - radiata pine (Pinus radiata) in the Mt Gambier
region and slash pine (P. elliottii) in Queensland - meet native
eucalypt forest. The plantations, mostly first rotation, were in the 23-37 years
age range.
The scientists analysed soil samples for a wide range of chemical properties
affecting soil fertility - notably organic matter content, levels of the major
nutrients nitrogen and phosphorus, and soil acidity.
"We found no major changes in soil properties - in fact some have improved,"
says Dr Carlyle.
"The key finding, though, was the lack of a major difference in organic
matter levels - in fact, these were marginally higher in the plantation soil.
This has important implications for carbon accounting and carbon credits as it
indicates that the long-term effect of converting land from pasture to pine is
neutral," he says.
Researchers found the average levels of organic matter under pine plantations
were around 16% higher than in native forest soil.
Dr Carlyle suggests this is a consequence of the higher productivity of the
plantations.
"Under the management systems developed for the Green Triangle region, pine
productivity is currently increasing from one rotation to the next, making the
plantations there a good example of sustainable forestry", he says.
Research also found that pine and native forest sites showed no difference in
nitrogen levels; an important result in the light of earlier concerns about
declining nitrogen levels under plantations. Phosphorus levels were
substantially higher under pine because of the use of phosphorus fertilisers.
"The plantation soils were slightly more acid, but their acid levels remained
safely in the range where any acidity impact on a subsequent non-tree crop would
be negligible," says Dr Carlyle
"Comparisons between pine and pasture showed much higher levels of phosphorus
and nitrogen under pasture than under the plantations."
According to Dr Carlyle, this is the result of nitrogen fixation by clover
and frequent applications of superphosphate in the improved pasture.
The Forest and Wood Products R&D Corporation funded this project, which
began in 1998.
More information from:
Dr Clive Carlyle, CSIRO Forestry and Forest Products 08 8721
8116
Mr Mick Crowe, CSIRO Forestry and Forest Products 02 6281 8357 mobile 0419
696 184 Email: Mick.Crowe@ffp.csiro.au
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