Urban Landscaping- Part I: Bareroot Trees (Webcast)
A best management practice that is increasingly moving from research to the field is bare root planting. Whether from a nursery field to the city street or just from one place in your yard to another, it's the roots that suffer when trees are transplanted.
Consider this: Shade tree roots are found primarily in the top 12inches of soil. Tiny absorbing roots- responsible for most of thetree's intake of water and nutrients- grow horizontally not only up tothe dripline, but also beyond it. In fact, there is often a higherpercentage of absorbing roots beyond the dripline than within it. Anunbelievable 90% of tree roots are routinely left behind in the nurseryat the time of harvest. In an industry where having a viable rootsystem is the primary determining factor of whether trees survive andthrive in their new location, current practices must be reevaluated.
This is a webinar resource. Length: 61 minutes.
P. Sheehan, N. Bassuk
June 2009
Presentation
Webinar
Grant or Foundation (Private), Alliance for Community Trees (ACT), USDA FS (Other)
Working with the Public, Urban Forest Management, Rooting Area
National
bare root, community, bare root, community
MWCU&CF
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