| Literature DB >> 25199618 |
Robert M Jetton1, Daniel J Robison.
Abstract
Sweetgum, Liquidambar styraciflua L. (Hamamelidales: Hamamelidaceae), is a species of interest for short-rotation plantation forestry in the southeastern United States. Despite its high levels of resistance to many native insects and pathogens, the species is susceptible to generalist defoliators during outbreak epidemics. The objective of this field study was to evaluate the potential impact of defoliation on sweetgum growth and productivity within the context of an operational plantation. Over three growing seasons, trees were subjected to artificial defoliation treatments of various intensity (control = 0% defoliation; low intensity = 33% defoliation; moderate intensity = 67% defoliation; high intensity = 99% defoliation) and frequency (not defoliated; defoliated once in April of the first growing season; defoliated twice, once in April of the first growing season and again in April of the second growing season). The responses of stem height, stem diameter, stem volume, crown volume, total biomass accumulation, and branch growth were measured in November of each growing season. At the end of the first growing season, when trees had received single defoliations, significant reductions in all growth traits followed the most severe (99%) defoliation treatment only. After the second and third growing seasons, when trees had received one or two defoliations of varying intensity, stem diameter and volume and total tree biomass were reduced significantly by 67 and 99% defoliation, while reductions in stem height and crown volume followed the 99% treatment only. All growth traits other than crown volume were reduced significantly by two defoliations but not one defoliation. Results indicate that sweetgum is highly resilient to single defoliations of low, moderate, and high intensity. However, during the three-year period of the study, repeated high-intensity defoliation caused significant reductions in growth and productivity that could have lasting impacts on yield throughout a harvest rotation.Entities:
Keywords: forest plantation; short-rotation woody crop; simulated herbivory
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25199618 PMCID: PMC4212847 DOI: 10.1673/031.014.107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Insect Sci ISSN: 1536-2442 Impact factor: 1.857
Analysis of variance P -values for sweetgum growth and biomass traits assessed following Year 1 of the artificial defoliation study.
P -values are reported for each main and interaction effect included in the ANOVA model; underlined P -values are significant at α ≤ 0.05.
Means (± SE) for sweetgum growth and biomass traits following Year 1 of the artificial defoliation study.
Data reflect the responses of sweetgum growth one growing season after a single artificial defoliation treatment of varying intensity. Means within a column followed by different lowercase letters are significantly different at α ≤0.05 by F -statistic protected Tukey’s studentized range test.
Analysis of variance P -values for sweetgum growth and biomass traits assessed following Year 3 of the artificial defoliation study.
P -values are reported for each main and interaction effect included in the ANOVA model. Underlined P -values are significant at α ≤ 0.05.
Means (± SE) for sweetgum growth and biomass traits following Years 2 and 3 of the artificial defoliation study.
Data reflect the responses of sweetgum growth over three growing seasons after artificial defoliation treatments of varying intensity and frequency. Means within a column followed by different lowercase letters (defoliation intensity) or uppercase letters (defoliation frequency) are significantly different at α ≤0.05 by F -st atistic protected Tukey’s studentized range test.
Fig 1.Response trajectories of sweetgum growth and biomass traits in each defoliation frequency/intensity class over the three-year duration of the artificial defoliation study. A high quality figure is available online.
Analysis of variance P -values for sweetgum branch growth traits assessed following Year 1 and Year 2 of the artificial efoliation study.
P -values are reported for each main and interaction effect included in the ANOVA model. Underlined P -values are significant at α 0.05.
Means (± SE) for sweetgum branch growth traits following Years 1 and 2 of the artificial defoliation study.
Data reflect the responses of sweetgum growth over two growing seasons after artificial defoliation treatments of varying intensity and frequency. Means within a column followed by different lowercase letters (defoliation intensity) or uppercase letters (defoliation frequency) are significantly different at α ≤ 0.05 by F -statistic protected Tukey’s studentized range test.