Abstract

Two pH experiments were conducted at a sandy, bareroot loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) nursery in Texas. A sulfur trial (0, 813, 1626, 2439 kg ha-1 of elemental sulfur) was installed to determine if lowering soil pH would result in nutrient toxicity symptoms and affect seedling morphology. Although soil acidity in the sulfur study ranged from pH 3.9 to pH 5.0, none of the treatments resulted in micronutrient toxicity and none affected height growth, root-collar diameter, root mass, shoot mass or the root-mass ratio (root dry mass/total dry mass). Acidifying soil with sulfur increased leaching of calcium, potassium, magnesium, manganese and zinc but there was no effect on seedling morphology. The objective of the liming trial (0, 813, 1626, 3252 kg ha-1 of dolomitic lime) was to determine if increasing alkalinity would result in an iron deficiency and reduce seedling growth. As expected, applying lime increased the calcium and magnesium levels but had no effect on soil levels of iron, phosphorus, potassium, sulfur, zinc and sodium. However, the root-mass ratio was reduced by applications of dolomitic lime (pH ranged from 5.3 to 6.0). Differences in soil properties (i.e. plot location) had a greater effect on seedling morphology than lime applications. Foliage levels of manganese and boron were reduced by the highest rate of lime and sulfur, respectively.

Highlights

  • Pine (Pinus taeda) seedlings are produced in bareroot nurseries with soils that range widely in soil acidity and soil texture (South and Davey 1983)

  • Soil acidity in the sulfur study ranged from pH 3.9 to pH 5.0, none of the treatments resulted in micronutrient toxicity and none affected height growth, root-collar diameter, root mass, shoot mass or the root-mass ratio

  • Acidifying soil with sulfur increased leaching of calcium, potassium, magnesium, manganese and zinc but there was no effect on seedling morphology

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Summary

Introduction

Pine (Pinus taeda) seedlings are produced in bareroot nurseries with soils that range widely in soil acidity and soil texture (South and Davey 1983). The desire to keep the pH range above pH 5.4 is based, in part, on fears about aluminum (Al) toxicity (Davey 1991) and reduced availability of nutrients like phosphorus (P) (Stone 1965; Bunting 1980). The objective of the sulfur (S) trial was to see if lowering soil pH would result in nutrient toxicity and negatively affect seedling growth. A second study was installed to see if reducing soil acidity with dolomitic lime would reduce growth of loblolly pine seedlings

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