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Arboriculture & Urban Forestry Online
Volume 42, Issue 4 — July 2016
https://www.isa-arbor.com/Publications/Arboriculture-Urban-Forestry

Effect of Liner Container Size, Root Ball Slicing, and Season of Root Pruning in a Field Nursery on Quercus virginiana Mill. Growth and Anchorage After Transplanting    (View PDF)

Edward F. Gilman, Maria Paz, and Chris Harchick

Abstract: Size of liner, root ball slicing when field planting, and field root pruning season were tested with intention of optimizing posttransplant performance of field-grown nursery stock. Trees planted into a field nursery from three container sizes and either root ball sliced or not when shifted to larger containers or planting to the field nursery, and root pruned in the field nursery in either the dormant season or growing season all had the same trunk diameter (144 mm) and tree height (6.4 m) three years after transplanting into the landscape. Container size influenced root attributes—including number and orientation—and anchorage rating of field-harvested trees. Trees planted from 11 L containers required more bending stress to winch trunks evaluated 12 and 25 months after transplanting than larger containers. Percentage of root systems graded as culls was reduced from 88 to 66 by root pruning when field planting, but root pruning resulted in a slight reduction in anchorage rating. Diameter of the ten largest roots at edge of field-harvested root ball decreased with size of container planted into field soil. Root pruning season had no impact on final tree height (4.3 m) at the conclusion of field production.

Keywords: Anchorage; Bending Stress; Container Volume; Dormant Season; Growing Season; Live Oak; Planting; Quercus virginiana; Root Architecture; Root Depth; Root Pruning; Transplanting.

https://doi.org/10.48044/jauf.2016.022


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