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Height and diameter growth of dense Populus plantations in response to fertilization and irrigation

Height and diameter growth of dense Populus plantations in response to fertilization and irrigation
Abstract Survival, height and diameter for the first four year rotation were measured on two intensively cultured Populus hybrid plantations in central Pennsylvania. Treatments of control, irrigation, fertilization and fertilization/irrigation were installed on two sites and in two establishment years. Overall treatment survival was not affected by site but values were lower for 1980 planted trees (83%) than 1981 planted trees (90%). Survival values among the treatments were similar until the later ages of the first rotation. Treatments with fertilizers had lower four-year-old survival (78%) than the treatments without fertilizers (86%). The four-year-old control trees averaged 5.3 and 6.8 m in height, and 3.4 and 4.2 cm in diameter for the 1980 and 1981 establishment years, respectively. Fertilization, with or without irrigation, consistently increased annual height and diameter over the control. Fertilization/irrigation did not result in tree size values that were greater than fertilization. In general, there were inconsistent increases in annual height and diameter from irrigation.
- Pennsylvania State University United States
