Abstract

SUMMARYConcentrations of oxygen and carbon dioxide were measured in an upland peaty gley soil during two growing seasons and a deep peat during one season. Measurements were compared with the soil water regimes on both soils. Comparison was also made between planted areas of Sitka spruce and Lodgepole pine, and areas of the native vegetation (Molinia grassland on the peaty gley, and Calluna heath on the deep peat). In 13 m tall pure stands of the pine and spruce on the peaty gley soil about 28% of the rainfall was intercepted by the canopy and evaporated without reaching the soil, and the watertable was deeper and matric potentials were lower than under grass. When the matric potential fell below −5 kPa in the upper soil layers, high oxygen concentrations prevailed. In undisturbed peat, waterlogged conditions produced an anaerobic regime virtually to the surface, but a 1 m deep drainage ditch lowered the watertable and created an aerobic regime within the top 0.3 m of peat. The presence of tree crops on drained plots increased the depth of drying during the summer months, and aerobic conditions reached 0.4 m depth under Sitka spruce and 0.5m under Lodgepole pine. On the peaty gley also, Lodgepole pine dried and aerated the soil to a greater depth than Sitka spruce during the summer, but no difference in water regime was evident in the winter.

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