scholarly journals Three Methods for Low-cost Regeneration of Pine—Hardwood Stands in the Gulf Coastal Plain

2000 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-44
Author(s):  
Robert H. Jones ◽  
Glenn R. Glover ◽  
James W. Kimbrell

Abstract Seedtree, clearcut-and-plant, and fell-burn-and-plant methods were applied to three mature, mixed loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.)-upland hardwood stands at the Dixon Forestry Education Center in southern Alabama. One to two years after treatment, all methods resulted in adequate stocking (> 100 trees/ac) of loblolly pine, laurel oak (Quercus hemisphaerica Batr. Ex Wild.) and other oak species. Clearcut-and-plant resulted in more laurel oaks than loblolly pines while fell-burn-and-plant had the opposite effect. Relatively high densities of both species occurred in the seed tree. In the first two years after harvest, fell-burn-and-plant had the lowest litter cover. All treatments had greater rates of surface soil movement than untreated controls. Six-to-seven years after methods were applied, loblolly pine and laurel oak maintained their dominance in all treatments, although loblolly pine had greater mean height and a greater proportion of stems in larger size classes. Density of oaks more than 4.5 feet tall 6 to 7 yr after harvest were predictable from pre-harvest surveys of total oak density. If adequate densities of pine seed and advance oak regeneration are in place at time of harvest, any of these low cost methods can provide successful regeneration of mixed pine-oak stands on Coastal Plain uplands. South. J. Appl. For. 24(1):37-44.

1988 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
William H. McKee ◽  
Larry P. Wilhite

Abstract In three separate studies on the Lower Atlantic Coastal Plain, sites were sheared, root-raked, and bedded, and phosphorus was applied. Loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) seedlings were planted, and nitrogen fertilizer and preemergence herbicide were applied at several different times. In all three studies, loblolly pine responded positively in height, diameter, and aboveground biomass to herbicide applied in the spring following planting. Responses to nitrogen application were inconsistent. A pronounced increase in growth was found in only one study. There, a nitrogen and a herbicide treatment interacted to give a three-fold increase in aboveground seedling biomass after one growing season. The lack of response to nitrogen in the other two studies may be attributable to low rainfall in the spring after planting and mineralization of native nitrogen from soil organic matter. South. J. Appl. For. 12(1):33-36.


1998 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 106-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Boris Zeide

A new method for estimating fractal characteristics (fractal dimension and foliage density) of a single crown or its portions is developed. The proposed method operates with volume and mass of natural units of the crown, such as shoots and branches, rather than with numbers of regular cubes. Fractal dimension alone is not sufficient to describe foliage distribution in the crown because it says nothing about the density of foliage at a given point. The density is defined as the ratio of foliage mass to fractal volume it occupies. Fortunately, the intercept of the regression, which contains fractal dimension as the slope, provides a measure of foliage density. Thus the method makes it possible to separate purely spatial factors represented by fractal dimension from ecophysiological effects characterized by foliage density. Application of the method showed that neither fractal dimension nor foliage density of the studied loblolly pines (Pinus taeda L.) correlates with current diameter increment. At the same time, there is a pronounced negative correlation between fractal dimension and crown size. These results suggest that as crowns become larger, the amount of foliage located at the crown periphery increases in proportion to the foliage amount inside the crown. As a spin-off of this analysis, a method for estimating relative foliage density (defined as the ratio of actual to maximal foliage mass for a given branch) is developed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 401 ◽  
pp. 207-214 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles M. Neaves ◽  
W. Michael Aust ◽  
M. Chad Bolding ◽  
Scott M. Barrett ◽  
Carl C. Trettin ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Xiongwei Lou ◽  
Yuhui Weng ◽  
Luming Fang ◽  
HL Gao ◽  
Jason Grogan ◽  
...  

Two machine-learning techniques, gradient boosting (GB) and random forests (RF), were used to predict stand mean height (HT), trees per hectare (Tree ha-1) and basal area per hectare (BA ha-1) based on datasets collected from extensively- and intensively-managed loblolly pine plantations in the West Gulf Coastal Plain region. Models were evaluated using coefficient of determination (R2), bias and root mean squared error (RMSE) by applying models to independent dataset and then compared to the model (Coble et al. 2017) currently being used in the region. For extensively-managed plantations, the GB models had less bias, larger R2 and smaller RMSE than RF and HT model was the best, followed by those of Tree ha-1 and BA ha-1. Even for BA ha-1, the GB model had R2 over 0.83. GB and RF models outperformed the Coble et al. (2017); differences were notable for HT and Tree ha-1, but significant for BA ha-1. For intensively-managed plantations, GB and RF were similarly great in predicting HT and Tree ha-1, but GB outperformed RF in predicting BA ha-1. We recommend the use of GB models to predict quantitative information required for managing loblolly pine plantations in the region.


1995 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 151-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert A. Schmidt ◽  
James E. Allen ◽  
Roger P. Belanger ◽  
Thomas Miller

Abstract The influence of oak control and pine growth on fusiform rust incidence (percentage trees infected) on rust-susceptible slash and loblolly pines was evaluated at age 5 yr at seven potentially high-rust-incidence locations in the Coastal Plain of FL, GA, and MS. Rust-susceptible oaks were reduced or eliminated in a 9 ac treatment block and the surrounding 500 ft border zone of an oak-free (OF) area; oaks were not controlled in an adjacent oak-present (OP) area. At four of seven locations, rust incidence was significantly greater on the OF areas compared with the OP areas, and among all locations, average rust incidence on pine was greater (Pr > F = 0.06) on the OF areas (51.4%) than on the OP areas (40.0%). Greatly reducing rust-susceptible oak stems in the treatment blocks and in a surrounding 500 ft border did not reduce rust incidence on rust-susceptible slash or loblolly pine. Inoculum to infect pine came from beyond the 500 ft border zone. Greater pine height, associated with reduced competition from oaks, likely contributed to the greater rust incidence on pine in the OF areas. South. J. Appl. For. 19(4):151-156.


1986 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 84-87
Author(s):  
H. R. Powers

Abstract Seedlings of Livingston Parish (Louisiana) loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) have been widely used across the Gulf and south Atlantic Coastal Plain to reduce the damage caused by the fusiform rust disease. Since this seed-source material provided the first rust-resistant seedlings available to forestland managers, it was used wherever rust damage was heavy, in some cases into the Piedmont north of the recommended area of planting. This paper evaluates the performance of ten-year-old Livingston Parish trees in such an area. The rust resistance of the Livingston Parish trees was outstanding, with 83% being free of disease as compared with only 14% of the commercial controls. There was no difference in growth between the two groups of trees, and ice breakage was not significantly greater in the Livingston Parish trees. South. J. Appl. For. 10:84-87, May 1986.


1991 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 92-97 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. C. Baldwin ◽  
D. P. Feduccia

Abstract Equations are presented for predicting inside bark (ib) or outside bark (ob) cubic-foot volume to any ob diameter limit, or the ib or ob diameter at any given height, of loblolly pine tress (Pinus taeda L.) growing in thinned or unthinned plantations in the West Gulf States region. The model formulation and simultaneous estimation technique utilized ensure that the volume and stem profile equations are compatible and the parameter estimates are statistically efficient. The 230 sample trees used to develop the equations were from central Louisiana plantations and ranged in diameters at breast height (D) from 1.3 to 20.8 in. in total height (H) from 16 to 96 ft, and in ages from 9 to 55 yr. Significant differences in stem profile between trees of the same D and H in unthinned and thinned plantations suggest that separate cubic-foot volume and upper-stem diameter prediction equations should be used South J. Appl. For. 15(2):92-97


1989 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 204-207 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce E. Borders ◽  
William M. Harrison

Abstract Age 8 measurements and analysis are reported and discussed for a large side-by-side loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.)/slash pine (Pinus elliottii Engelm.) species comparison study. It is shown that loblolly pine performed better than slash pine in CRIFF soil groups A, D, F, and G whileslash pine and loblolly pine performed similarly in CRIFF soil groups B and C. South. J. Appl. For. 13(4):204-207.


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