School of Agriculture, Food and Ecosystem Sciences - Research Publications

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    Nitrate Uptake from an Aquifer by Two Plantation Forests: Plausibility Strengthened by Process-Based Modelling
    Smethurst, PJ ; McVicar, TR ; Huth, NI ; Bradshaw, BP ; Stewart, SB ; Baker, TG ; Benyon, RG ; McGrath, JF ; Van Niel, TG (MDPI AG, 2022-02-01)
    Forest plantations can access water from some unconfined aquifers that also contain nitrate at concentrations that could support hydroponic culture, but the separate effects of such additional water and nitrogen availability on tree growth have not hitherto been quantified. We demonstrate these effects using simulation modelling at two contrasting sites supporting Eucalyptus globulus Labill. or Pinus radiata D.Don plantations. The APSIM Eucalyptus and Pinus models simulated plantation growth within 2% of observed growth where the water table was at 4 m depth for eucalypts (height 28 m, MAI 32 m3 ha−1 year−1) and at 23 m for pines (height 37 m, MAI 20 m3 ha−1 year−1). In simulations without an aquifer, observed growth could only be matched using unrealistically high surface soil nitrogen (N) supply, suggesting this is an unlikely mechanism. Simulated aquifer N concentrations, evapotranspiration, and net N mineralization and leaching (emergent properties of modelling) were similar to measured values. These results strengthen the plausibility that aquifer N uptake by plantations could be contributing to tree growth. This hypothesis warrants further research that quantifies these processes at multiple sites. Simulations included growth of herbaceous and tree weed species, and pasture, which demonstrated the utility of the process-based APSIM modelling framework for dynamically simulating carbon, water and N of plantations and other mixed-species systems.
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    Self-thinning tree mortality models that account for vertical stand structure, species mixing and climate
    Forrester, D ; Baker, TG ; Elms, SR ; Hobi, ML ; Ouyang, S ; Wiedemann, JC ; Xiang, W ; Zell, J ; Pulkkinen, M (ELSEVIER, 2021-05-01)