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Juvenile Wood in Pines. Overview. Basics Of Wood Production What Is Juvenile Wood Characteristics What influences Juvenile Wood What Are The Problems With It How To Manage It. Basics of Wood Production. Tracheids. Structure Functions Water transport in the xylem Support Storage.
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Overview • Basics Of Wood Production • What Is Juvenile Wood • Characteristics • What influences Juvenile Wood • What Are The Problems With It • How To Manage It
Tracheids • Structure • Functions • Water transport in the xylem • Support • Storage
Growth Rings • Trees produce two types of rings during the a growing season • Spring Wood (early wood) • Summer Wood (late wood)
Where it is Found • First set of growth rings extending out from the pith of the tree
When it is produced • Is highly variable between species, stands, and individuals • It is produced by all tree, but species and site location play a large part in determining its impact • Can be between 3 to 20 years average of 10 years
Growth rings • Wide growth rings • Ring Age • Uniformity
Growth rings Tracheid characteristics • Wall thickness and tracheid diameter • Tracheid length • Angle
Growth rings SpecificGravity • Tracheid characteristics • Less summer wood in Juvenile wood • Much lower specific gravity
Competition • Live crown • Growth rate • Geographic location
Strength • Shrinkage • Compression wood formation
Tanzania • South African Forestry Journal – No. 172 March 1995 p 19-23 • Indigenous lumber sources were insufficient for the needs of the country • Plantation of Pinus patula • 60,000 ha planted • 49% of stems consisted of Juvenile wood
Stand density • Initial spacing • Spacing and thinning
Fertilization • Increases foliar mass and photosynthetic ability • Decrease in summer wood production and specific gravity • Less pronounced in mature wood • Promotes spring wood production
Irrigation • Early application has same results as seen with fertilization • Promotes spring wood production • Late application prolongs cambial activity • Promotes summer wood production
Removing Competing Vegetation • Early removal promotes seedling growth • Continued removal into the pole stage to reduce competition and increase growth, but promotes juvenile wood • Juvenile wood produced for a longer period of time, but higher specific gravity
Summary • Juvenile wood is in all trees, but can be a problem in rapid growing pine species • It is influence by competition, live crown, growth rate and location • It can be managed by controlling stand density, fertilization, irrigation, and managing competing vegetation