Site preparation and competing vegetation control affect loblolly pine long-term productivity in the southern Piedmont/Upper Coastal Plain of the United States |
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Authors: | Dehai Zhao Michael Kane Bruce E. Borders Mike Harrison John W. Rheney |
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Affiliation: | 1. Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources, University of Georgia, 30602, Athens, GA, USA
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Abstract: | ? A site preparation study was established in 1986 to evaluate the effect of different site preparation treatments on growth and yield of loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) plantations on the Piedmont and Upper Coastal Plain regions of the southern United States. Site preparation treatments included: (1) burn only, (2) chop-burn, (3) shear-pile-disk, (4) chop-herbicide-burn, (5) herbicide-burn, and (6) herbicide-burn-herbicide. ? The data from the available 19 installations at age 21 were analyzed with separate analysis of variance and a multilevel nonlinear mixed-effects modeling approach. ? The herbicide-burn-herbicide treatment significantly increased average Dbh, height, basal area and volume per hectare compared to all other treatments. The burn only treatment consistently ranked worst and was followed by the chop-burn treatment. The shear-pile-disk and chop-herbicide-burn treatments had similar overall growth pattern, and will approach the same level of pine volume as the herbicide-burn treatment. ? Loblolly pine mean annual increment in volume (m3 ha?1 y?1) at age 21 by treatment were: herbicide-burn-herbicide (17.9), shear-pile-disk (16.1), herbicide-burn (15.9), chop-herbicide-burn (15.4), chop-burn (14.3), and burn (11.2). ? An additional chop or herbicide treatment to the burn treatment significantly increased loblolly pine yield. Complete control of both herbaceous and woody completion enhanced long-term pine productivity. |
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