Genetic improvement and evaluation of black cottonwood for short- rotation biomass production. Final report, 1987--1992
Author(s) -
R. F. Stettler,
T. M. Hinckley,
Paul E. Heilman,
H. D. Bradshaw
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/277085
Subject(s) - hybrid , populus trichocarpa , short rotation forestry , biomass (ecology) , productivity , salicaceae , tree breeding , forestry , biology , agroforestry , microbiology and biotechnology , woody plant , botany , agronomy , geography , macroeconomics , genome , economics , gene , biochemistry , coppicing
This project was initiated in 1978 to serve three objectives: (1) develop genetically improved poplar cultivars offering increased productivity under short-rotation culture; (2) identify the major components of productivity in poplar and determine ways in which they can be manipulated, genetically and culturally; and (3) engage in technology transfer to regional industry and agencies so as to make poplar culture in the Pacific Northwest economically feasible. The project is aimed at capturing natural variation in the native black cottonwood. Populus trichocarpa T & G, and enhancing it through selective breeding. Major emphasis has been placed on hybridization of black cottonwood with P deltoides and P maximowiczii, more recently with p nigra. First-generation (F{sub 1}) hybrids have consistently outperformed black cottonwood by a factor of 1.5.-2. The high yields of woody biomass obtained from these clonally propagated hybrids, in rotations of 4-7 years, have fostered the establishment of large-scale plantations by the pulp and paper industry in the region. Physiological studies have helped to elucidate hybrid superiority and several of the underlying mechanisms
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