PRECIPITATION AND
DUFF FALL
Agnieszka Parzych, Jan Trojanowski
Abstract
Every year forest soils are enriched with nitrogen and phosphorus
compounds due to the fall of leaves and litter of conifer needles,
mineralization of ground cover and decaying tree roots, as well as
precipitation. The process has been examined in two forest ecosystems: a mixed
forest (plot I) and a young wood (plot II). The overall fall of duff collected
in the young wood of the Słowiński National Park
(plot II) has been 3.014 t/ha·year, which
constitutes 69.35% of the fall collected in the mixed forest (plot I) on this
territory (4.346 t/ha·year). The maximum intensity of duff fall
occurred in autumn months and constituted 62.36% and 64.20% of annual fall
respectively. Totally, 46.96 kg/ha·year of N and P were
supplied to the soil of the plot I and 22.04 kg/ha·year
in the case of the plot II. The precipitation enriched the soils of the mixed
forest by 33.66 kg/ha·year of nitrogen and 1.19 kg/ha·year of phosphorus, the soils of the young
wood – by 23.06 kg/ha·year of nitrogen and 0.92 kg/ha·year of phosphorus.