Lundin, Lars
- Department of Soil and Environment, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2014Peer reviewedOpen access
Lundin, Lars; Nilsson, Torbjörn
Highly increased use of biomass production is placing great demands on Swedish forests. Several silvicultural measures can be implemented to increase forest production and fertilization being addressed in this paper is one. Forest companies are now increasingly applying fertilizer, with the main nutrient needed for high forest growth being nitrogen (N).This study investigated how commercial N fertilization (150 kg N/ha, including also Ca, Mg and B) of the 45 ha forest catchment Risfallet in central Sweden affected chemical composition and runoff export in stream water during one year after the fertilization. This well-defined and long-term monitored catchment proved very suitable for studies of water quality and nutrient losses. The fertilizer consisted of ammonium nitrate (50/50 ammonium and nitrate, respectively), plus calcium (Ca, 22 kg ha(-1)) and magnesium (Mg, 12 kg ha(-1)) to mitigate acidification and boron (B 1.1 kg ha(-1)) to compensate for decreased boron availability. The study was carried out according to the paired catchment method using a control area and a calibration period. Data from the after treatment period were compared with previous 25-year monitoring data for the catchment and also data for a similar 83 ha control catchment, Gusseltjarn, in the same region. During the first year after treatment, the nitrate concentration in stream water increased from 0.05 mg L-1 to 3.3 mg L-1 on average. Other elements showing increased concentrations were ammonium (300%), B (3-fold), Mg (80%), Ca (60%), potassium (K) (50%) and sodium (Na) (40%). The pH decreased in the first half-year by 0.2 pH-units. One year after treatment, 14% of the N applied had leached from the catchment. Crown Copyright (C) 2014 Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Fertilization; Forest; Catchment hydrology; Nitrogen; Boron; Water chemistry
Forest Ecology and Management
2014, volume: 331, pages: 218-226
Publisher: Elsevier
Forest
SDG6 Clean water and sanitation
Environmental Sciences
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/60792