BRANCH OCCLUSION AFTER PRUNING IN FOUR CONTRASTING SUB-TROPICAL EUCALYPT SPECIES

Authors

  • R. G. B. Smith

Keywords:

Crown dynamics, self-pruning, wood quality, solid wood production

Abstract

SMITH, R. G. B., DINGLE, J., KEARNEY, D. & MONTAGU, K. 2006. Branch occlusion after pruning in
four contrasting sub-tropical eucalypt species. Branch related defects are the major cause of degrade in
eucalypts grown for solid wood. The effects of pruning on the growth and branch occlusion in Eucalyptus
cloeziana, E. pilularis, E. dunnii and E. grandis were studied. Trees of each species were pruned to remove
30% of the green crown at 3.5 years of age. Diameters and the state of all branches in two 0.5 m sections of
trunk were assessed at one, two and four years after pruning. Growth rates were unaffected two years after
pruning in all species. In all species, except E. cloeziana, the rate of occlusion of dead branches was not
significantly different between pruned and unpruned branches. In contrast, the greatest difference in
occlusion rates was between pruned and unpruned live branches. Eucalyptus grandis and E. dunnii showed
high early rates of occlusion compared with E. pilularis and E. cloeziana for the first year. The occlusion
rates of unpruned branches generally showed a positive correlation between branch size and time to
occlusion. Relationships were more complex in species that self-pruned less efficiently. Since occlusion
rates in dead branches (pruned and unpruned) were similar, there would be little benefit in pruning dead
branches and it may increase susceptibility to decay entry and the occurrence of loose knots. Pruning only
green branches may be difficult in efficient self-pruning species.

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Published

2022-06-23

How to Cite

R. G. B. Smith. (2022). BRANCH OCCLUSION AFTER PRUNING IN FOUR CONTRASTING SUB-TROPICAL EUCALYPT SPECIES. Journal of Tropical Forest Science (JTFS), 18(2), 117–123. Retrieved from https://jtfs.frim.gov.my/jtfs/article/view/702

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