Return to search

Interactions among Silvicultural Intensity, Genotype, and Environment and Their Effects on the Growth and Mortality of Loblolly Pine and Slash Pine Families

Managed pine forests are central to the economic vitality of the southeastern US. Over the past fifty years, the productivity of managed pine forests of this region have increased significantly with the development of new silvicultural technologies and the use of improved tree genetic material. Of the pine species present in the southeastern US, loblolly pine has arguably been the most intensively studied and widely planted by forest managers.

Efficient operational deployment of improved genetic materials requires an understanding of how possible site conditions and silvicultural treatment may interact to affect maximum yield. There are a wide range of site conditions in the south as the result of regional climate gradients, soil type and soil drainage patterns. On the western edge of loblolly pine’s natural extent, Texas has a drier climate than areas to the east, and in Louisiana, there are also poorly drained Ultisols that are found in areas with little relief and are prone to flooding. However, on the basis of 10-year forest inventory data of pure-family plots from three different sites and under two levels of cultural regime intensity, my study found that superior genotype, Lob 5 from South Carolina, still showed best performance in the Western Gulf area, and high intensive treatment could improve stand growth and resistance to wind damage significantly. Further, my study compared the stand production and dynamics between pure- and mixed-family plots. I found that Lob 5 and Lob 4 showed the growth traits of competitive ideotype, and low intensive treatment increased the deployment effect significantly for competitive ideotype. Finally, my study examined leaf area index (LAI) and foliar nitrogen concentration (foliar N). The result showed that fast growing genotype had lower LAI and foliar N than slow growing one. It indicated that fast growing genotype had high resource use efficiency and nutrient requirement.

This research provided critical information to guide industrial forest management in the WG (Western Gulf) area. First, introduced superior genotype continued to show good performance in this area. Second, combination of good genotype and high intensive treatment would increase plantation production significantly. Third, identification of ideotype would increase the accuracy of growth potential estimation in progeny test.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/151251
Date16 December 2013
CreatorsZhai, Lu
ContributorsVogel, Jason G., Byram, Thomas D., Hons, Frank M.
Source SetsTexas A and M University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis, text
Formatapplication/pdf

Page generated in 0.0017 seconds