نتایج جستجو برای: pinus taeda

تعداد نتایج: 13246  

Journal: :Tree physiology 1996
J W Groninger J R Seiler J A Peterson R E Kreh

To determine the effects of shade on biomass, carbon allocation patterns and photosynthetic response, seedlings of loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.), white pine (Pinus strobus L.), red maple (Acer rubrum L.), and yellow-poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera L.) were grown without shade or in shade treatments providing a 79 or 89% reduction of full sunlight for two growing seasons. The shade treatments r...

2004
Simon B. Bird Robert N. Coulson Richard F. Fisher

Soil and litter arthropods are important in many forest ecosystem processes where they help to regulate nutrient dynamics and soil quality, and are useful bioindicators of ecosystem condition and change. This study was initiated in response to concerns about possible decline in site productivity due to intensive forestry practices. We investigated the effects of tree harvesting and site prepara...

Journal: :Environmental pollution 2008
Algirdas Augustaitis Andrzej Bytnerowicz

The study aimed to explore if changes in crown defoliation and stem growth of Scots pines (Pinus sylvestris L.) could be related to changes in ambient ozone (O(3)) concentration in central Europe. To meet this objective the study was performed in 3 Lithuanian national parks, close to the ICP integrated monitoring stations from which data on meteorology and pollution were provided. Contribution ...

Journal: :Brazilian Journal of Biology 2007

2007
J. A. N. VAN AARDT

Three southern USA forestry species, loblolly pine (Pinus taeda), Virginia pine (Pinus virginiana), and shortleaf pine (Pinus echinata), were previously shown to be spectrally separable (83% accuracy) using data from a full-range spectroradiometer (400–2500 nm) acquired above tree canopies. This study focused on whether these same species are also separable using hyperspectral data acquired usi...

2002
T. A. Dierauf

Survival of loblollypine seedlings stored in unheated buildings from four to nine weeks improved five to eight percentage points when they were immersed in water for an hour before planting. Soaking for a day gave essentially the same results, but soaking for one or two weeks reduced survival drastically. Brief immersion of s~edling packages every two weeks during storage impro~ed survival four...

2004
S. E. McKeand J. E. Grissom R. Rubilar H. L. Allen

Loblolly pine is by far the most important forest tree species in the South, with over 1 billion seedlings planted annually by forest industry and non-industrial private forest landowners (McKeand et al. 2003). Genetic gains from tree improvement programs have been large, since geographic and within-provenance variation for growth and adaptive traits in loblolly pine is very large. General tren...

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