Abstract
The effects of top-dressing of several industrial and farming sidestream materials on the growth of downy birch (Betula pubescens Ehrh.) and Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) seedlings in natural sphagnum peat soil were evaluated. Wood fly ash, industrial filter cake waste, mine tailings sand (quartz feldspar from lithium orebody), and digestate and liquid reject of cow manure from a biogas plant were studied for their physical and chemical properties, as well as for their effects as soil ameliorants on seedling growth during one growing period in a greenhouse. Each material was top-dressed on unfertilised peat in pots in quantities that corresponded to the amounts of ash used in Finnish peatland forest fertilisation (2-6tha-1). During growing, the pH of percolate water from the growing pots was below 4, and in the treatments with filter cake even below 3. However, no clear impairment of seedling growth due to acidity was observed. In all treatments, birch and pine seedlings grew at least as well as in the unfertilised peat (control treatment). Growth was strongest in the peat top-dressed with additives originating from cow manure, in which the high N and P contents promoted growth so much that foliar N was found to be diluted with respect to a high P content in the birch seedlings. No harmful concentrations of heavy metal residues were observed from the materials used. Overall, the results suggest that all the used sidestream materials show potential as soil improvers on forested peatlands.
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