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Effect of nursery production method, irrigation, and inoculation with mycorrhizae-forming fungi on establishment of Quercus virginiana

Reference Type
Journal, Research (Article)

This study was designed to 1) determine the influence on live oak (Quercus virginiana) survival and growth of planting from different nursery production methods, incorporating mycorrhizae-forming fungi into the backfill soil, and irrigation management after planting; and 2) evaluate the costs of these practices to determine the most effective and/or least expensive way to establish live oak in the landscape. [UMN]

"Live oak (Quercus virginiana) trees were grown to about a 2.5 in. (6 cm) caliper in various container and field production systems, then transplanted to a landscape with and without mycorrhizae-forming spores under two irrigation regimes. Trees grew at nearly the same rate in the nurseries, regardless of production method. However, root distribution was altered. Low-profile, air root-pruning containers had less roots on the outside surface of the root ball than did traditional plastic containers. Application of mycorrhizae- forming fungi to the backfill soil at planting in a landscape had no impact on live oak the first 30 months after planting. However, nursery production method and irrigation frequency following planting had a huge influence on tree survival. Irrigating 2.5 in. (6 cm) caliper live oak for only 6 weeks after planting in spring in a slightly drier than normal year resulted in 43% tree death rate. Irrigating twice each week through the first summer after planting in spring kept all trees alive. Under limited irrigation conditions, trees from containers died sooner and more trees died than field-grown, B&B trees. Root-pruned, field-grown, B&B trees survived better than all others following transplanting. Trees planted from all nursery production methods survived and grew similarly, provided they were irrigated regularly through the first growing season. Under limited irrigation, landscape managers would obtain the most live trees by planting root-pruned, fieldgrown, B&B nursery stock." [Abstract]

Authors
E.F. Gilman
Date Published
2001
Journal/Conference
Journal of Arboriculture
Publisher
International Society of Arboriculture
Publisher Location
Savoy, IL (US)
ISBN/ISSN
0278-5226
Volume
27
Number
1
Start Page
30
End Page
39
Sub-Topics
Growth, Roots, Planting
Keywords
Maintenance
Libraries
UMN

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