It was anticipated that forest biosolids fertilization could achieve the dual benefits of improved soil fertility and tree growth in nitrogen-deficient Douglas-fir plantations of the Whistler Interpretive Forest, while providing an economic and environmentally safe disposal for Whistler’s municipal sewage biosolids. This experiment was established as a co-operative study between the B.C. Ministry of Forests, the University of British Columbia and the Resort Municipality of Whistler, to determine if these results were achievable was established
The experiment was established in 1993 near Whistler, B.C. in a 15-year-old, nutrient deficient Douglas-fir plantation that had been thinned to 600 stems/ha and pruned to 3m height the year before. Season of application was tested by applying the fertilizers in 3 areas (blocks) with each block fertilized in a different season: summer (August 1993), fall (September, 1993) and spring (June, 1994). The five fertilizer treatments (750, 1000, and 1500 kg/N/ha applied as biosolids, a conventional fertilizer at 225 kg N/ha, and an unfertilized control) were tested in 0.09ha plots with 2 plots per block receiving the same treatments (10 plots per block or 30 plots in total).
Completed 1999.