Abstract
In Chernozemic soils, active CaCO3, an estimate of the CaCO3 in the clay and fine silt particles, proved to be a more effective site index for several tree species than total CaCO3. In general, active CaCO3 exceeding 7–9% caused incidences of stunted growth and chlorosis. High levels of active CaCO3 within the 0–30 cm soil depth were related to enrichment of CaCO3 in the clay fraction.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Cited by
13 articles.
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