To improve planting-stock production of native forest tree species for
tropical forest ecosystem restoration projects in northern Thailand, we compared
a new controlled-release fertilizer, developed by NANOTEC, with our
current standard fertilizer treatment for its effects on sapling growth and
biomass allocation in a small-scale tree nursery. Eight species were tested:
Artocarpus lacucha, Adenanthera microsperma, Acrocarpus fraxinifolius,
Hovenia dulcis, Horsfieldia amygdalina, Phyllanthus emblica, Prunus
cerasoides and Syzygium albiflorum, using a randomized complete block
design with three treatments x three replicates of nine plants per replicate
for each of the eight species. The treatments were NANOTEC fertilizer,
applied once at doses 0.30 g or 0.15 g per sapling, two weeks after pricking
out small seedlings from germination trays into plastic bags 23 cm x 6 cm,
compared with 0.30 g Osmocote® 13:13:13 (our current most effective fertilizer
treatment). Sapling growth (height, crown width and root collar diameter)
was then measured over 121 days. The new NANOTEC fertilizer, at both
doses, performed equally as well as Osmocote®. With very few exceptions,
differences in mean sapling growth performance, biomass, root:shoot ratio and remaining nutrients (N, P and K) in the potting medium, among all the
fertilizer treatments, were not statistically significant, for every individual
species and when treatment data were combined for all species. Consequently,
the locally produced NANOTEC fertilizer, at 0.15 g/tree, could be used as a
cost-effective substitute for 0.30 g Osmocote®, provided that its retail price is
similar to or lower than that of Osmocote®, when it enters mass production.
Keywords
Sapling growth, NSTDA, Sapling propagation
CHIANG MAI UNIVERSITY JOURNAL OF NATURAL SCIENCES
Published by : Chiang Mai University Contributions welcome at : http://cmuj.cmu.ac.th
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