skip to content skip to navigtion accessibility statement

New Zealand Journal of Botany abstracts


Sampling variability in nutrient cycling studies in some forested ecosystems of Westland, New Zealand

M. P. LEVETT*
J. A. ADAMS
T. W. WALKER

Department of Soil Science
Lincoln College, Canterbury, New Zealand

"Correspondence to: Dr M. P. Levett Present address: Department of Primary Industry P.O. Box 417, Konedobu, NCD Papua New Guinea Abstract Field collectors were used to collect monthly samples of litterfall, rainfall, and through- fall for a two-year period, and soil drainage beneath the soil organic horizon and at the base of the root- ing zone for 12 months, in two indigenous and four pine forest plots in Westland. Coefficients of vari- ation (CVs) for estimates of components of litter- fall, rainfall, throughfall, and soil drainage below the organic soil and rooting zone and their asso- ciated nutrient fluxes in kg/ha/yr are given. Litter- fall variability was greatest on plots where canopy closure was incomplete or where wood-fall was a significant component of litterfall. CVs for nutrient fluxes in litterfall was generally similar to, or lower than, those for dry weight of litterfall. Incident rainfall was very uniform (CV 2-3%). Variability increased markedly (CV 16-31%) as a result of rainfall passing through the forest canopy. Nutrient fluxes in bulk precipitation and throughfall were considerably more variable than amounts of pre- cipitation and throughfall respectively. For soil drainage, samples collected by tension-free (tray) lysimeters gave results approximately 2-5 times more variable than those for tension lysimeters. For the latter, variability was generally similar to that for throughfall nutrient fluxes. Choice of the num- ber of field collectors to be used should be based on the degree of inherent variability, which depends on the ecosystem. In practice, it will also depend on the availability of resources. Generally, 3-5 rain gauges, 20-25 throughfall gauges and littertraps, and 10-20 lysimeters are considered to be a suitable compromise for some indigenous and pine forests in Westland, New Zealand. Some form of stratified random sampling is desirable for collection of throughfall and litterfall in forests with open can- opies. Wood-fall, other than for small twigs, was inadequately sampled by 12 littertraps. It is sug- gested that for the major components of wood-fall larger areas of the forest floor be regularly sampled.

Keywords Podocarp-hardwood forest; beech forest; radiata pine forest; nutrient cycling; rainfall, throughfall; litterfall; soil drainage; lysimeters; sampling variability; coefficients of variation; Westland; New Zealand

Received 5 October 1984; accepted 18 March 1985
New Zealand Journal of Botany, 1985, Vol. 23: 407-415
0028-825X/85/2303-0407$2.50/0 © Crown copyright 1985

PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (631K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)


This year's abstracts | Journal home page | All abstracts | Publishing home page

© The Royal Society of New Zealand
MoST Content Management V3.0.3671