Early genetic differentiation of sugar maple by accelerating seedling growth

1981 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 288-291
Author(s):  
Bruce W. Wood ◽  
James W. Hanover

A method is described for accelerating growth of sugar maple (Acersaccharum Marsh.) seedlings for early progeny and provenance evaluation and plantation establishment. Outdoor nursery production methods produced relatively small seedlings, few seed-lot differences, and no provenance differences in seedlings 4 and 16 months of age. In contrast, accelerated seedlings exhibited pronounced seed-lot and provenance differences at both ages and had a 29 and 80% height superiority at 4 and 16 months, respectively. Provenance differences in height, budbreak, nodes, and growth flushes revealed by the accelerated treatment and supplemented by seed characteristics indicate existence of Upper and Lower Peninsula races in Michigan. Accelerated growth techniques may have considerable potential for reducing the time required for genotypic evaluation of sugar maple and possibly other tree species, but results must be substantiated by subsequent field observations.

2013 ◽  
Vol 39 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Levinsson

After transplanting, many trees enter a period of reduced growth that may limit their environmental and aesthetic benefits for several years. A number of nursery production methods have been developed in attempt to reduce root disturbance, which is often associated with the reduced growth. The main objective of this study was to investigate how five nursery production methods affect root systems and post-transplant shoot growth. Other objectives were the study of the effect of root structure (i.e., fibrous verses coarse) on trees’ response to different production methods and the effect of the conditions at the transplanting site. Sweet cherry (Prunus avium L.) and red oak (Quercus rubra L.) with a stem circumference of 16–18 cm were produced as bare-rooted-, balled-and-burlapped-, root-pruned-, air-potted-, or fabric-container-grown trees, transplanted at two sites and studied for five seasons. Visual analysis showed that the production methods had clear effect on the root balls at transplanting. However, the differences were not clearly related to shoot growth. All transplanted red oaks, regardless of production method, showed significantly reduced shoot growth compared to pre-transplant growth. Balled and burlapped, root-pruned, and fabric-container-grown sweet cherry trees exhibited restored pre-transplant shoot growth three years after transplanting at the more favorable site. The results suggest that the fibrous-rooted sweet cherry was more responsive to production methods designed to reduce transplanting stress than the coarse-rooted red oak, and that site affected the time required for normal shoot growth to be regained. The results do not indicate that different sites require differently produced trees.


2012 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 679-683 ◽  
Author(s):  
Glenn Wehtje ◽  
Charles H. Gilliam ◽  
Stephen C. Marble

Flumioxazin is used in nursery production and landscape maintenance industries. In these situations, weed control provided by flumioxazin often lasts longer than that reported in soil. Our objective was to quantify flumioxazin longevity under conditions found in nursery production. Pots were filled with 6 : 1 (v/v) pine bark : sand mixture. This nonsoil media is typical of what is used for nursery crop production. Pots were treated with flumioxazin at either 0.28 or 0.42 kg ai ha−1, and subsequently sown with either hairy bittercress (two winter experiments) or spotted spurge (two summer experiments) at weekly intervals. Weed seed germination, emergence, and seedling establishment in the treated pots was compared with nontreated control and used as a proxy for herbicide activity. Flumioxazin provided approximately 7 wk of complete (100%) hairy bittercress control regardless of rate. However, a rate effect was evident in only one of the two experiments conducted with hairy bittercress. In both experiments with hairy bittercress, marginal and highly variable activity was still evident at 18 wk after treatment. Flumioxazin at 0.28 and 0.42 kg ha−1provided 2- and 4-wk complete spotted spurge control, respectively. No spotted spurge control was evident after about 8 wk. Subjecting this less-variable data to nonlinear regression revealed that the time required for 50% reduction in flumioxazin activity was approximately 5.5 and 6.6 wk for the two rates, respectively. A column leaching study revealed that flumioxazin activity remained localized near the surface (0 to 4 cm). Therefore the dissipation observed was likely the result of in situ degradation and not displacement. The high organic matter content of the nonsoil media contributes to the observed persistence of flumioxazin activity.


2020 ◽  
Vol 32 (5) ◽  
pp. 645-659
Author(s):  
Eung Tae Kim ◽  
Sungmin Kim

PurposeThe purpose of this study is to develop a modular garment assembly line simulator that can be used for various production methods such as traditional mass production or modern small quantity batch production.Design/methodology/approachFor realistic simulation, the actual shape and sewing information of the garment patterns were used. The assembly line consists of process units including the cutter, preprocessor, module assembly, final assembly, finish, and stack units. Any number of units can be arranged and connected to form various layouts. The simulation can be run at an arbitrary speed.FindingsThis system can be used to estimate the time required to process the given order for a specific layout. Therefore, it can be utilized as the basis for optimum production line design.Originality/valueThis system is expected to be utilized by garment manufacturers for obtaining the productivity improvement, production cost reduction, and increased competitiveness.


Forests ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (8) ◽  
pp. 798
Author(s):  
Shanon Hankin ◽  
Gary Watson

For urban trees with strong taproots, a shift in root growth towards increased lateral root development could improve tree performance in compacted, poorly drained urban soils. In effort to achieve this desired shift, various propagation and production practices exist within the nursery industry. However, the effectiveness of practices used to disrupt taproot development, as well as their impact on root architecture, has been largely undocumented. To determine how seedling root systems respond to taproot growth disruption, we pruned oak seedling taproots either mechanically at 5 and/or 15 cm, or via air pruning at 15 cm. Taproot regeneration and lateral root development were evaluated after two years. Taproot pruning resulted in multiple regenerated taproots. The location and number of times the taproot(s) was pruned did not appear to alter the ultimate number. Mechanical taproot pruning did not affect lateral root development above the first pruning cut location at 5 or 15 cm, but generally increased the density of lateral roots below the pruning cut, likely due to the multiple taproots present. Most lateral roots were fine roots less than 1 mm in diameter (fine roots), being unlikely to become long-lived components of the root system architecture. The average number of lateral roots on air pruned (AP) seedlings was generally greater than on the same taproot segment of control (C) seedlings. To determine how these seedling changes impact the root regeneration of liner stock, we planted both taproot pruned and taproot air pruned seedlings in in-ground fabric bags filled with field soil (B) or directly into the field without bags (F). Root regeneration potential (RRP) at the bottom and lateral surfaces of the root ball were evaluated. There was less RRP on the lateral surface of the root ball in taproot air pruned, container-grown (CG) compared to taproot pruned, bare root (BR) bur oak liners, and there was no difference in red oak liners. The multiple taproots of mechanically pruned BR seedlings did not result in excessive taproot development as liners. In contrast, CG seedling taproots restricted by air pruning produced more regenerated taproots after transplanting. While seedling taproot growth disruption does disrupt the growth of a dominant single taproot and alters the architecture toward increasing the number of lateral roots, these practices do not result in laterally dominated root architecture at the liner stage of nursery production. Future research should determine how these production methods effect lateral root growth after a tree is established in the landscape and determine appropriate combinations of production methods for different species.


Author(s):  
Whitney April Jackson ◽  
Joshua A. Honig ◽  
Peter E Smouse ◽  
Jason Grabosky

Sugar maple (Acer saccharum Marsh) is the most economically important member of the Hard Maple species complex, a group of related species that occupy a range between Canada and Mexico and adapted to distinct ecological niches. Sugar maple has been identified as vulnerable to rapid climate change, and sustainable solutions are needed to support its role in the production of maple sugar, as well as timber and nursery production in the northeastern US. Genetic relationships between sugar maple and its allies are largely unknown. In the current study, genetic relationships of 278 individuals from six hard maple species were assessed using 17multi-allelic microsatellite (SSR) loci. Genetic variance was partitioned into separate components for variation within and among populations, within and among species. Most of the divergence among populations (FPT = 0.263) reflected inter-specific divergence (FST = 0.169), but provenances within species also differed at non-trivial scales (FPS = 0.113). Estimation and testing of paired inter-provenance divergence showed that all population pairs were statistically divergent. Principal Coordinates Analysis (PCoA) indicated that the pattern of radiation observed among these taxa is broadly compatible with geography.


2008 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 67-69
Author(s):  
T.J. Banko ◽  
M.A. Stefani

Abstract Verbena canadensis ‘Homestead Purple’ and ‘Taylortown Red’ were treated with one or two spray applications of the plant growth regulator (PGR) Pistill (ethephon) at 0, 250, 500, 750, or 1000 ppm. Plants were in 3.8 liter (1 gal) containers under outdoor nursery conditions. Plant widths of ‘Homestead Purple’ verbena were suppressed linearly with increasing Pistill concentrations up to 24% at 2 weeks after initial treatment (WAT) and up to 18% at 4 WAT. Widths of ‘Taylortown Red’ verbena were suppressed 22% at 2 WAT with a single application at 500 to 1000 ppm, and linearly up to 33% at 4 WAT with 2 applications. Two applications of Pistill suppressed heights and widths of both cultivars at 7 WAT compared to one application.


1992 ◽  
Vol 22 (8) ◽  
pp. 1147-1150 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.E. Kolb ◽  
D.A.J. Teulon

Sugar maple (Acersaccharum Marsh.) seedlings were exposed to either cool (11.9 °C) or warm (18.2 °C) temperatures in the presence or absence of adult pear thrips (Taeniothripsinconsequens Uzel) during bud burst and early spring growth. Time required for spring stem elongation was shorter at the warm temperature than at the cool temperature. Thrips feeding reduced height, leaf area, and seedling dry weight at both temperatures, and reductions were greater at the cool temperature than at the warm temperature. The results indicate that cool temperatures that slow bud burst promote pear thrips damage to sugar maple leaves.


2015 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-19
Author(s):  
Gary J. Keever ◽  
J. Raymond Kessler ◽  
L. Heath Hoffman ◽  
James C. Stephenson

A study was conducted under nursery production conditions to evaluate multiple concentrations of dikegulac sodium (dikegulac) (0, 800, and 1,600 ppm) applied either once or twice as a foliar spray to blackgum grown at two locations in Alabama and to southern sugar maple grown at a single location. Mid-season and end-of-season shoot counts increased linearly in response to increasing dikegulac concentrations in both species and at both locations. Shoot counts also were greater when dikegulac was applied twice compared to a single application, except when 800 ppm dikegulac was applied to blackgum at one location. Both southern sugar maple and blackgum were visibly more branched and compact following treatments with dikegulac than nontreated control plants, although the branching response was much greater in blackgum. Effects of dikegulac application on plant height and caliper varied with species, concentration, application number, and time after application. Southern sugar maple exhibited temporary reddening of immature foliage that dissipated over time, while immature foliage of blackgum yellowed at one location and cupped and developed necrotic lesions at the second location. No phytotoxicity was evident 6 weeks after dikegulac application.


1996 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 81-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard W. Tinus

Abstract Plug transplants were developed in the Pacific Northwest as a way to accelerate nursery production and increase root system fibrousness of barefoot seedlings, and the practice has been spreading to other areas. This paper describes a trial of its use in a do: Southwestern area. Ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa var. scopulorum Engelm.) seed was sown in February in small containers, transplanted to outdoor nursery beds at Albuquerque NM in May, lifted the following February, and outplanted as plug+1 stock in April. Survival was as good (76 and 71%) and growth better (232 vs. 209 mm) than standard 2+0 stock after 3 yr. A similar regime for Engelmann spruce (Picea engelmannii (Parry) Engelm.) produced seedlings that survived and grew well (survival 86 and 94%, height growth 54 and 56 mm for plug+2 and standard stock, respectively), but they required 2 yr in the nursery bed (plug+2) to reach adequate size for transplanting, which negated the advantage of reduced production time. West. J. Appl. For. 11(3):81-84.


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