Tuesday, 8 November 2005 - 8:45 AM
192-3

Harvest Residue, Soil Compaction, and Vegetation Control Effects on Early Growth of Douglas-Fir in Coastal Washington.

Adrian Ares1, Thomas Terry1, Constance Harrington2, Warren Devine2, and Robert Harrison3. (1) Weyerhaeuser Company, 2730 Pacific Blvd. SE, Albany, OR 97322, (2) U.S. Forest Service, Forestry Sciences Laboratory, Olympia, WA 98512-9193, (3) University of Washington, College of Forest Resources, Box 352100, Seattle, WA 98195-2100

We assessed the impacts of biomass removals, soil compaction and tillage, and vegetation control on early growth of Douglas-fir planted on a highly-productive site in coastal Washington. Harvest treatments included removal of commercial bole (B0), bole only up to 5-cm top diameter (BO5), total tree (TT), and total tree plus all legacy coarse woody debris (TT+). Vegetation control (VC) effects (0 and +) were tested in the BO treatment, while soil compaction (SC) and compaction plus tillage (SC+T) were imposed in the BO+VC treatment. Five years after planting, tree growth was chiefly limited by competing vegetation. Mean tree bole diameter (DBH), total height (TH), and volume index (SVOL = DBH2 x TH) in the BO treatment without VC were 34 mm, 308 cm and 4337 cm3, respectively, compared to 44 mm, 356 cm and 8297 cm3 in the BO+VC (P £0.01). Biomass removal and soil compaction effects on tree growth were relatively small. Mean tree SVOL in the BO treatment was greater than in the TT treatment (P <0.05). Mean tree TH was similar in the BO and SC treatments, but increased in the SC+T treatment (P <0.05). Understory vegetation significantly reduced soil volumetric water which was positively related to tree DBH, TH and SVOL. Volumetric soil water content during the low-rainfall mid-summer period appeared to be the main factor limiting tree growth. Supporting this hypothesis, δ13C, an index of drought stress, was 0.7‰ lower in latewood of trees in the BO-treatment than of those in the BO-VC treatment (P = 0.02). Although soil solution N concentrations were greater in BO than in TT during years 3 and 4 after planting, foliar N concentration(1.58-1.69%) did not differ among treatments. Treatment effects were related to changes in available soil water rather than to nutrient cycling.

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