Nutrient cycles in pine and their adaptation to poor soils

Abstract
Values for the various fluxes of nitrogen through the tree-soil system were calculated using models derived from measurements of rates of input, accumulation and transfer in plots of 11 m tall Pinus nigra var. maritima (Ait.) Melv. [Corsican pine] that were showing growth responses to varying rates of N fertilizer. As the result of continuing immobilization in trees and humus, growth of the unfertilized trees was declining and the trees were having to sacrifice older tissues to mobilize sufficient N for new growth. In the fertilized trees, there was similar mobilization but of excess N stored during the period that fertilizers were applied. Models of the flux of N, P, C and Mg at optimum growth showed that tight cycling and low rates of immobilization, coupled with effective retention of relatively high atmospheric inputs, probably represents the adaptive mechanism that enables trees to thrive on soils low in K and Mg. High rates of immobilization and low rates of atmospheric input relative to tree uptake mean that despite the maintenance of tight cycles, the trees continued to make significant demands on soil reserves of N, P and Ca throughout their life cycle.