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Replacing Soil in the Root Zone of Mature Trees for Better Growth

Reference Type
Journal, Research (Article)

"Soils were replaced in various patterns within the root zone of mature landscape trees as an alternative to surface mulching. Care was taken to minimize the damage to the root systems, through careful positioning of the excavations, or use of hydraulic excavation procedures. Tree roots grew better in the new soil mixes than in the original site soil, exhibiting up to a 320% increase in fine root density and up to a 68% increase in rooting depth. Declining annual growth rate trends were reversed by the treatment in Tilia and Platanus. Soil replacement has potential as another useful tool for treating declining trees." [Abstract]

Authors
G.W. Watson, P. Kelsey, K. Woodtli
Journal/Conference
Journal of Arboriculture
Publisher
International Society of Arboriculture
Publisher Location
Champaign, IL (US)
ISBN/ISSN
0278-5226
Volume
22
Number
4
Issue
July 1996
Sub-Topics
Growth, Roots
State(s)/Region(s)
National, Illinois
Keywords
CRZ, Declining trees, Platanus, Root system, Tilia

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