Short-term N uptake by Norway spruce roots was investigated after tracer application both in the field and in the laboratory. In the forest the influence of wood ash or liquid fertiliser treatments on the uptake was studied. A rapid uptake of the 15 NH 4 15 NO 3 tracer into the fine roots was observed. Within 1 day of application about 50% of the maximum δ 15 N value observed was measured and within 1 week as much as 70-90%. The 15 N enrichment in fine roots was not affected by wood ash and liquid fertiliser treatments applied in the previous year. δ 15 Ν increased continuously until 2 months after 15 N application and decreased to 60% of its maximum value within 1 year. Nine months after the tracer application, an analysis of δ 15 N distribution throughout the root system was conducted. The δ 15 N values were highest in roots of the topsoil compared to roots at deeper soil layers, and higher in fine roots than in larger roots. The 15 N was not translocated within the root system. The laboratory experiment, using Norway spruce seedlings, aimed at describing short-term 15 NO 3 uptake and assimilation into free amino acids with 2 mM or 20 mM nitrate application. The 15 N was detected within 4 h to 1 day in the amino acids Glu, Gln, Asp of roots, while in Asn, Ala and Ser and in the shoots, the 15 N was retrieved at the earliest after 1 day. The enrichment factor in the amino acids increased to a maximum within 3-7 days, depending on the nitrate concentration applied.