Leśne Prace Badawcze, 2011, 72, 4: 311-319.
Piotr Sewerniak
Wpływ uziarnienia gleby na bonitację drzewostanów sosnowych
w południowo-zachodniej Polsce
The influence of soil texture on the site index of Scots pine stands
in south-west Poland
bstract. The study was conducted in 349 Scots pine
(Pinus sylvestris L.) stands comprising two soil moisture groups –
non-gleyic (273 plots) and gleyic (76). In every plot, the site index
of a Scots pine stand was determined as mean height of the ten thickest
trees per 0.1 hectare, called the “top height”. The top height was
recalculated for a base-age of 100 years (H100), however this indicator
was biased in relation to stand age. The bias was removed using a
regression model, and then the obtained site index (B) ceased to be
related to stand age. Soil texture data was already available from the
forest service of the State Forests National Forest Holding. For each
stand the weighted mean value of every soil textural class was
calculated.
The site index was positively correlated with the texture fraction
<0.02 mm content but only when pine grew on sandy soils. This
relationship was stronger for non-gleyic than for gleyic soils. There
was also a positive correlation between site index and texture fraction
0.02-0.1 mm, but only for non-gleyic soils. The content of the texture
fraction >1 mm had the opposite effect on site index for each soil
group (negative on non-gleyic and positive on gleyic soils).
The results (height growth) show that Scots pine most effectively
utilizes soil nutrient resources when grows on sandy soils and that the
species does not utilize the potentially greater nutrients retention by
clay soils. On sandy soils the positive influence on pine growth of
increasing the composition of fine fractions was caused more by the
beneficial effect of their moisture retention (water sorption) than any
nutritional role.
Key words: forest soil, Pinus sylvestris, nutrients, site humidity, tree growth

