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Epicormic sprout development in pruned coast redwood: pruning severity, genotype, and sprouting characteristics
Authors:Kevin L O’Hara  John-Pascal Berrill
Institution:1. Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California, 137 Mulford Hall, 94720-3114, Berkeley, CA, USA
2. Department of Forestry & Wildland Resources, Humboldt State University, One Harpst Street, 95521, Arcata, CA, USA
Abstract:
  • ? Young coast redwood (Sequoia sempervirens (D. Don.) Endl.) trees were pruned to various heights to examine the effect of pruning severity on epicormic sprouting. Seven separate stands were used with as many as six treatments per stand in coastal Humboldt County, California, USA.
  • ? Epicormic sprout development was affected by pruning severity but primarily at the most severe pruning treatments that removed all but the branches in the top 15% of tree height. Less severe treatments produced sprouts but the number and size of these sprouts were comparable to unpruned trees.
  • ? Natural clonal patterns were also used to explore patterns of sprouting between genotypes. Linear mixed-effects models were developed to predict sprouting frequency as a function of pruning severity while accounting for the nested data structure (i.e., stem sections sampled nested within genotypes within treatments within sites).
  • ? Comparing variances attributed to each of these random effects indicated that at any level of pruning severity, differences in epicormic sprouting between genotypes and sites expressed soon after pruning had disappeared after six growing seasons. Epicormic branches were more common two years after pruning than six years indicating many branches were dying. Branches were more common in the middle of the pruned bole, possibly because of competition from basal sprouts and the expanding tree crown.
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