scholarly journals White spruce growth to age 44 in a provenance test at the Petawawa Research Forest

2006 ◽  
Vol 82 (4) ◽  
pp. 572-578 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristian Morgenstern ◽  
Margaret Penner

Twenty-five provenances of white spruce were planted in 1963 in 144-tree plots and three replications as part of a provenance test series for eastern Canada. The experiment was well maintained and thinned to 50% of its original stocking in 1986 (age 26 years from seed).Measurements at age 44 were subjected to analyses of variance and correlation and compared with height and survival at age 15. The results demonstrated that at age 15, identification of the best provenances is ineffective because of changes in rank and the late expression of survival differences. At age 44, significant differences among provenances were observed for survival, mean height, diameter, basal area, and volume. The greatest volume was produced by a provenance from Cushing in the Ottawa Valley in Quebec, 287 m3 per ha, which was 11% greater than the volume of the local provenance, Chalk River, Ontario. When ranked on the basis of survival and volume, the best eight provenances included five from Quebec, and one each from New Brunswick, Ontario, and Wisconsin. The experiment shows that at the appropriate stage in a selection program, large plots can yield significant results, which has important implications for the design of experiments. Key words: provenance tests, jack pine, experimental design, growth and yield

1974 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 127-137
Author(s):  
S. Popovich

This paper presents a method of evaluating site productivity by volume per square foot of basal area, comparing it with the method of dominant height. Based on this method, this study also offers tables for estimating the production of plantations in relation to the average height, the average form quotient, and to the average basal area of the stand. Moreover, this study gives practical instructions about several factors influencing growth and yield of white spruce (Piceaglauca, Moench.) plantations in the province of Quebec.


1981 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 124-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. K. Morgenstern ◽  
A. G. Corriveau ◽  
D. P. Fowler

Survival and total height of red spruce (Picearubens Sarg.) at ages 15 and 22 years from seed are reported. Twelve provenances distributed from North Carolina to Quebec were grown in three experiments each in Ontario, Quebec, and New Brunswick; seven additional provenances were only partially represented. Variance, correlation, and regression analyses were made. Results at both ages were very similar. Provenance differences in survival were small at individual sites and significant only when the results from all nine sites were combined. Provenance differences in height were well expressed and significant in each of the three groups of tests, with northern provenances growing best. Several provenances were also relatively stable and performed well from site to site. Correlation and regression analyses showed that variation in height was more closely related to the degree of introgressive hybridization with black spruce (Piceamariana (Mill.) B.S.P.) than to latitude, elevation, or precipitation at the place of seed origin. These results were conditioned by development on open sites which are not typical red spruce sites.In contrast with expectations when the study was initiated, it is now apparent that provenances from the southern Appalachian Mountains in West Virginia and North Carolina are less variable than expected and not suitable for reforestation in Canada.


Author(s):  
A. Dantani ◽  
S. B. Shamaki ◽  
M. A. Gupa ◽  
A. I. Zagga ◽  
B. Abubakar ◽  
...  

This study was conducted in order to estimate growth and volume production of Teak (Tectona grandis) in Kanya Forest Plantation, Nigeria. The plantation was divided in to six strata-based age classes (A=38, B=37, C=36, D=35, E=34, F=28, years). Five plots were randomly selected from each stratum. Trees within each plot were enumerated and measured. Variables measured include total height, diameter at the base, middle, top, and diameter at the breast height were taken from 30 temporary sampled plots of 25x25 m approximately from the center, 180 dominant trees were selected from 712 trees. Descriptive statistic was used to summarize the results while inferential statistic (correlation) was used to establish relationship growth and yield variables. Basal area and volume of sampled trees were computed using Excel as well as scatter plots, correlation analysis was achieved using SPSS statistical package version 20. The results of growth and yield values obtained from the dominant trees are (B=249.312 m3/ha, D=196.128 m3/ha, F=134.976 m3/ha, C=119.328 m3/ha, E=100.320 m3/ ha and A=86.976 m3/ha). The results showed that B was (37 years) the best and A (38 years) was the poorest. The results of correlation showed positive relationships with most of the tree growth and yield characteristics but negative relationships exist between age and some parameters that is to say as the age increases those parameters are decreasing.


1981 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. F. Ker ◽  
G. D. Van Raalte

Equations are given, based on data from 298 balsam fir and 88 white spruce trees in northwestern New Brunswick, for predicting ovendry weight of biomass for balsam fir and white spruce trees. Separate equations are given for each of nine components: stem wood, stem bark, total stem, branches, foliage, total crown, total aboveground weight, roots, and total tree. Independent variables used in the equations include diameter at breast height (dbh), height, crown width, crown length, and indices of basal area, crown area, and crown volume.


2021 ◽  
Vol 97 (02) ◽  
pp. 204-218
Author(s):  
Mohammed Henneb ◽  
Gaetan Pelletier ◽  
Mathieu Fortin ◽  
Nelson Thiffault ◽  
Marie-Andrée Giroux

Natural forest regeneration after natural or anthropogenic disturbance is difficult to predict given its high variability. The process is poorly documented for commercial northern hardwood species in the Acadian forest of eastern Canada. Our objective was to identify the silvicultural, environmental, and ecological factors that best explain the variability in sapling density and occurrence of two commercial tolerant hardwood species in New Brunswick: American beech (Fagus grandifolia Ehrh.) and sugar maple (Acer saccharum Marsh.). Forty-three permanent sample plots were established in 2002 and measured before harvesting in 2004. Sapling density and occurrence were measured 14 years after harvesting. The results showed that the interactions between the species and the residual merchantable basal area and between the species and the percent of hardwoods in the original stand best explained the sapling density and occurrence variation of tolerant hardwoods. The sapling density of sugar maple increased with increasing merchantable residual basal area. However, the effect of this variable was not significant for the density of American beech saplings. The density and occurrence of tolerant hardwood saplings both increased along with the percent of hardwoods in the original stand. These results provide an improved understanding about tolerant hardwood regeneration dynamics in New Brunswick forests.


2000 ◽  
Vol 30 (8) ◽  
pp. 1256-1263 ◽  
Author(s):  
David F Greene

I tested a sexual recruitment model that couples equations for seed production, dispersal, and juvenile survivorship using 10 sets of recent strip cuts in Quebec and New Brunswick. The model states that seed production is dependent on basal area and inversely proportional to seed mass, while juvenile survival is directly proportional to seed mass. In consequence, the seed mass effects should (roughly) cancel out, and fecundity should be primarily a function of basal area. Further, the model predicts that species evenness should be more or less the same following strip-cutting. As expected from the model, the single best predictor (r2 = 0.53) of recruitment density was the basal area density (area/area) of the source trees, and all cuts were well stocked. There was a stronger tendency toward a post-harvest increase in species evenness than was expected. Ninety percent of all stems were recruited by the fourth growing season.


2007 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 449-461 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuzhen Li ◽  
Eric C. Turnblom ◽  
David G. Briggs

To examine the effects of density control and fertilization on stand growth and yield of young Douglas-fir ( Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco) plantations, seven treatment regimes were applied in sixty-three 9-year-old plots from nine installations across western Washington and Oregon. Fertilizer was applied at the rate of 220 kg N·ha–1 (as urea) at stand establishment and every 4 years thereafter. Results after 12 years showed that widely spaced stands exhibited significantly larger quadratic mean diameter than did narrowly spaced stands. The densest stands initially had the greatest overall stand basal area and volume, but accumulation rate in the dense stands had been declining with time. After 12 years, the less dense stands had met or exceeded the basal area periodic annual increment of dense stands. Across all densities, the periodic annual increments of quadratic mean diameter, basal area, and volume in fertilized plots were significantly greater than in unfertilized plots following the first and second urea applications. However, the first fertilization was insufficient to produce a significant increase in stand yield and the significant fertilization increases in yield were found following the second and the third urea applications. This study showed neither significant fertilization effect nor density effect on dominant height. In addition, no significant interactions were found for any stand growth and yield variables considered, but fertilization responses showed different trends among density treatments over time.


2011 ◽  
Vol 87 (04) ◽  
pp. 494-503 ◽  
Author(s):  
Krish Homagain ◽  
Chander Shahi ◽  
Willard Carmean ◽  
Mathew Leitch ◽  
Colin Bowling

Intensive forest management for wood production requires that we identify our most productive forest lands as well as the most productive and most commercially valuable tree species that should be managed on these lands. The Thunder Bay Spacing Trial established in 1950 provides growth and yield comparisons on a productive site for red pine, white spruce, and black spruce. Our analysis based on six remeasurements from 1983 to 2007 show that red pine has produced more than twice the volume of white spruce and about three times the volume of black spruce. The greater volume for red pine in comparison to the spruces is attributed to taller trees, larger average diameters and more basal area.


2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. 111-120
Author(s):  
Luciano Farinha Watzlawick ◽  
Cristiane Carla Benin

This study aimed to evaluate the effect of planting spacing on production and dendrometric variables, in experimental planting with improved E. benthamiiseeds, at six years of age. The experimental design adopted was in randomized blocks, with four replications of twenty trees. The treatments were four planting spacing 3 x 2 m, 3 x 3 m, 3 x 4 m and 4 x 4 m. After the field procedures (forest inventory, sampling and cubage of 79 trees), the main dendrometric parameters were obtained in each spacing. The heights were determined by a hypsometric relationship and the volume ofother trees in the stand was estimated by the model of Schumacher and Hall (1933). The dendrometric variables showed a high correlation with the spacing. The wider spacing favored the diameter, height, transversal area and the individual volume, while the smaller vital spaces were responsible for the highest values of basal area and volume per hectare. Production ranged from 238.90 m³ ha-1in the largest spacing to 392.08 m³ ha-1in the smallest spacing. It was concluded that there was an effect of the planting spacing, and that with the trends observed regarding the higher production per hectare in the denser spacing, it is opportune to plan the forest production according to the planting spacing adopted.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Gilson Fernandes da Silva ◽  
Salvador Alejandro Gezan ◽  
Carlos Pedro Boechat Soares ◽  
Luciano Zumerle Zaneti

This study aimed to present an approach to model the growth and yield of the speciesSchizolobium amazonicum(Paricá) based on a study of different spacings located in Pará, Brazil. Whole-stand models were employed, and two modeling strategies (Strategies A and B) were tested. Moreover, the following three scenarios were evaluated to assess the accuracy of the model in estimating total and commercial volumes at five years of age: complete absence of data (S1); available information about the variables basal area, site index, dominant height, and number of trees at two years of age (S2); and this information available at five years of age (S3). The results indicated that the 3 × 2 spacing has a higher mortality rate than normal, and, in general, greater spacing corresponds to larger diameter and average height and smaller basal area and volume per hectare. In estimating the total and commercial volumes for the three scenarios tested, Strategy B seems to be the most appropriate method to estimate the growth and yield of Paricá plantations in the study region, particularly because Strategy A showed a significant bias in its estimates.


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