Total biomass increments were determined for three adjacent 22-year-old Douglas-fir (Pseudotsugamenziesii (Mirb.) Franco) plantations in the Oregon Coast Range that had widely different early growth rates. Estimated total aboveground biomass of the stands, designated slow, intermediate, and fast, was 98.7, 148.7, and 203.7 Mg•ha−1, respectively; estimated mean biomass increment in the 5 years previous to sampling was 8.9, 12.6, and 12.3 Mg•ha−1•year−1. The slow stand had a greater proportion of aboveground biomass in branches and a smaller proportion in stem wood than the intermediate and fast stands. Differences in biomass increment were primarily due to stem rather than crown growth. Total below ground biomass was highest in the fast stand, the difference being due to roots >5 mm in diameter; weight of roots <5 mm was greater in the slow and intermediate stands. Roots >5 mm comprised about 77% of the total root system in those stands and 90% in the fast stand. Increment of roots >5 mm was 2.2, 2.5, and 3.0 Mg•ha−1•year−1 in the slow, intermediate, and fast stands. The ratio of productivity to total leaf nitrogen suggests that nitrogen is a principal limiting resource in the intermediate stand. The fast stand, with a leaf area index 50% greater than the others, is probably limited by light. The slow stand has anaerobic soils during at least part of the year, which may restrict rooting depth and thereby induce water stress during summer drought.