Abstract
The growth and N status of Sitka spruce on deep peat sites low in available N is improved in the presence of larch. It has been suggested that larch stimulates N mineralization because of high N concentrations in its litter and the large N input resulting from its annual litter fall. However, while larch foliar N concentrations were shown to be high, marked withdrawal and storage in other tree components resulted in a relative and absolute impoverishment of the litter. P and K could be leached from senescing foliage in relatively large amounts, but the potential loss of N was low. Field measurements of throughfall substantiated this finding. Larch seemed extremely conservative in its use of N, suggesting that larch litter does not directly enhance N availability in mixed stands.