Effect of pruning season and tool on knot occlusion and stem discolouration in <i>Betula pendula</i> – situation five years after pruning
Author(s) -
Pentti Niemistö,
Harri Kilpeläinen,
Henrik Heräjärvi
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
silva fennica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.622
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 2242-4075
pISSN - 0037-5330
DOI - 10.14214/sf.10052
Subject(s) - mathematics , pruning , betula pendula , knot (papermaking) , horticulture , botany , biology , composite material , materials science
This paper investigates and models the effects of pruning season and tool on wound occlusion with varying tree and branch characteristics of silver birch (Betula pendula Roth) stems at the pruning height of 0−4 metres. Dates of eight secateurs prunings, three saw prunings and two sticks prunings as well as unpruned control were tested in permanent plots on four sites. Knot occlusion and discolouration in stemwood were measured from about 1600 studied knots of 112 sample trees felled five to six years after pruning in 2010. Knot occlusion rate was modelled according to pruning tool, date, tree growth, and branch characteristics. The occlusion was the fastest in trees pruned in spring or early summer, and the slowest in trees pruned in autumn. Stubs of living branches occluded faster than the dead ones with the same diameter. Saw pruning resulted in clearly better occlusion rates than secateurs pruning, caused by the shorter knot stubs after saw pruning. Hitting dead branches away with a stick resulted in the worst occlusion status. The colour defects spread more often upward from the knot than downward. Discolouration in stemwood was detected more frequently near to the pruned branches than the unpruned ones, and more widely near to the stubs of dead branches than the living ones. Most saw and secateurs pruned branches were completely occluded during the experiment, so these prunings were suitable for all branches under 20 mm in diameter, and for living branches even up to 30 mm in fast-growing trees.
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