Intensive plantation culture: 12 years research
Authors: | Edward A. Hansen |
Year: | 1983 |
Type: | General Technical Report |
Station: | Northern Research Station |
DOI: | https://doi.org/10.2737/NC-GTR-91 |
Source: | Gen. Tech. Rep. NC-91. St. Paul, MN: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Forest Experiment Station. 155 p. |
Abstract
A collection of papers summarize the status of knowledge for growing hybrid poplars in a short rotation intensively cultured system. The research included studies of propagation, physiology, culture, engineering, insects and diseases, and economics.Titles contained within Intensive plantation culture: 12 years research
- The practice and physiological basis of collecting, storing and planting Populus hardwood cuttings
- Survival and growth of two intensively cultured jack pine provenances raised in Tubepak and Jiffy 7 containers
- Mycorrhizae of poplars
- Effect of Alnus glutinosa on hybrid populus growth and soil nitrogen concentration in a mixed plantation
- Developing Alnus for use in intensive culture
- Irrigating forest plantations
- Effect of harvesting season on hybrid poplar coppicing
- Effect of severing method and stump height on coppice growth
- Growth and yield of Populus coppice stands grown under intensive culture
- Projected and actual biomass production of 2- to 10- year-old intensively cultured Populus 'Tristis # 1'
- Yield physiology of short rotation intensively cultured poplars
- Recent advances in research of some pest problems of hybrid populus in Michigan and Wisconsin
- Diseases of intensively cultured hybrid poplars: a summary of recent research in the north central region
- Some implications of populus intensive culture on nongame birds
- Synopsis of utilization research on SRIC raw materials
- A prototype harvester for short-rotation plantations
- Prototype wood chunker used on Populus 'Tristis'
- Biomass from intensively cultured plantations as an energy, chemical, and nutritional feedstock
- Economic investigations of short rotation intensively cultured hybrid poplars
- Founding concepts for tree breeding and research