Effects of fertiliser applications after thinning of Pinus radiata on a high-elevation site in south-eastern Australia
2016
Green, Phil | Turner, John | Knott, Jim
A trial to assess the effects of fertiliser applied after thinning was established in a ten-year-old Pinus radiata stand growing on a high elevation site in south-eastern Australia. The trial had two components. The first studied the effects of fertilisers applied in a factorial design with two levels of phosphorus (0 and 50 kg P ha –¹) and three of nitrogen (0, 150 and 300 kg N ha –¹) plus a mixed nutrient treatment to areas thinned to a routine intensity. In the second part, levels of thinning intensity were assessed with and without a fertiliser (N ₁P ₁) application. Over the seven years of the study, growth was affected by below average rainfall in four of the years. Significant responses to fertiliser were achieved with all treatments; the best was 150 kg N ha –¹ + 50 kg P ha –¹ plus trace elements. The volume increment was increased by 28%, however this was not significantly different from the N ₁P ₁ alone. The N ₁P ₁ fertiliser increased productivity at all thinning levels including the unthinned treatment. Models predicting relative growth response based on foliage nutrient levels gave reasonable predictions, that is, 29% increase in volume periodic increment and this was slightly higher than that achieved. On such low rainfall sites, rather than having multiple thinnings, one option is a relatively heavy thinning at a young age with fertiliser application and then leaving the stand until final harvest. Estate optimisation models provide forest managers with the means to evaluate fertiliser-thinning treatment options against objectives such as maximising the present value of expected future cash flow within production and budget constraints.
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