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Effect
of nursery nitrogen application of bare-root Larix olgensis seedlings
on growth, nitrogen uptake and initial field performance
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Guo Lei Li*, Yan Zhu, Yong Liu, Le Jiang, Wenhui Shi, Jiajia
Liu, Jiaxi Wang and Zhongqian Cheng
Key
Laboratory for Silviculture and Conservation, Ministry of Education, Beijing
Forest University, Beijing 100083, China
*Corresponding
Author email : glli226@163.com
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Publication
Data
Paper received:
04 November 2011
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Revised received:
21 May 2012
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Accepted:
26 July 2012
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Abstract
Nursery
nitrogen application has been used to improve seedling quality. The technique
has received little attention with bare-root seedlings and their subsequent
field performance on weed competition sites. Our research objective was to
examine responses of one- and two- year-old bare-root Olga Bay larch (Larix
olgensis Henry) seedlings to nursery nitrogen supplements and subsequent
one-year field performance on a competitive site. The fertilizer levels (kg N
ha-1) were 0 (control), 60
(conventional fertilization, 60 C), 120 (additional nitrogen applied two
times, 120 L), 180 (additional nitrogen applied three times, 180 L) and N
were applied in increments of 30 kg ha-1 at 15-day interval to maintain a base nutrient level.
Although pre-planting morphological attributes and nitrogen status of
one-year-old (1a) seedlings were more sensitive to 60 C than for two-year-old
(2a) seedlings, the conventional application failed to enhance their field
survival(15.6% vs 17.8%), relative height growth (89.0% vs 79.6%), and
relative diameter growth (17.0% vs 22.9%). The 1a seedlings‘ field survival
(15.6% for 0, 17.8% for 60 C) and 2a seedlings‘ relative height growth rate
(11.0% for 0, 8.9% for 60 C) were not increased significantly until they were
provided the 120 L (survival of 23.3% for 1a, relative height growth rate of
15.0% for 2a). According to pre-planting attributes and field performance,
optimum nursery nitrogen application was 120 L for the 2a seedlings and 180 L
for 1a seedlings. Except for component nitrogen concentration, pre-planting
morphological attributes and component N content for the 2a seedlings were as
much 3.3 to 37.7 times that of 1a seedlings. In conclusion, the contrasting
survival of poor (15.6%-28.9%) for 1a seedlings and high (84.4%-91.1%) for 2a
seedlings indicated that additional nitrogen fertilizer would not equal the
benefits of an another year‘s growth in the nursery. Successful reforestation
could not be fulfilled by 1a seedlings regardless of their pre-nutrients. An
alternative technique for sites with competing vegetation was to apply 120kg
N ha-1 in the nursery
during July and August on 2a seedlings.
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Key words
Larix olgensis, Nitrogen
application, Seedling age, Weed competition, Field performance
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