New publication: Tree rings can be used to reconstruct changes in soil phosphorus availability
Published in Dendrochronologia: 
Kohler M., Niederberger J., Wichser A., Bierbaß P., Rötzer T., Spiecker H., Bauhus J. (2019): Using tree rings to reconstruct changes in soil P availability – Results from forest fertilization trials. Dendrochronologia, 54, 11-19.
Abstract
Hitherto, there are only few studies that have analysed the variation of  P contents in individual tree rings to reconstruct fluctuations in soil  P availability. Therefore, this pilot study aimed to assess the  relationship between changes in P content in tree rings and known  changes in soil P availability resulting from fertilization of Norway  spruce (Picea abies) and Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) in fertilization  trials at two different sites. We compared P contents in single tree  rings from fertilized and unfertilized plots formed before and after P  fertilization and assessed (1) whether fertilization leads to an  immediate increase in P uptake and higher P contents in tree rings  formed after fertilization, and (2) whether P is translocated to older  tree rings that were formed before fertilization.
 
 After application of 70 kg P ha−1, a prompt and extended increase in  relative wood P contents could be observed in both Norway spruce and  Scots pine. However, only at the Norway Spruce site, this increase could  be properly assigned to a P fertilization signal in heartwood rings  formed after fertilization. In sapwood rings, however, P fertilization  signals were masked by the inherent increase in P content from older  towards younger sapwood rings, which was at least one order of magnitude  higher than the increase from fertilization. We could not observe a P  translocation into older tree rings, which existed as sapwood rings at  the time of fertilization.
 
 This pilot study underlines the potential of dendrochemistry for  reconstructing changes in soil P availability and improves the  conceptual basis for further dendrochemical research, not only in  fertilized but also in unfertilized forest ecosystems.
