Simulated Cattle Injury to Planted Slash Pine: Combinations of Defoliation, Browsing, and Trampling
Citation
Lewis, C. E. (1980). Simulated cattle injury to planted slash pine: Combinations of defoliation, browsing, and trampling. Journal of Range Management, 33(5), 340-345.Publisher
Society for Range ManagementJournal
Journal of Range ManagementDOI
10.2307/3897879Additional Links
https://rangelands.org/Abstract
Cattle injure young pines by defoliating, browsing, and trampling them. Little is known about how these injuries at various levels and in various combinations will affect survival and growth of planted pines. Therefore, such injuries were simulated once on slash pine at 6, 18, and 30 months after planting by (1) hand clipping to remove needles, (2) clipping off the shoots, and (3) bending the stem at a right angle to the vertical. Survival was poorest when treatments were applied to seedlings within 6 months after planting, whereas mortality was low when older seedlings were treated. Only the severest treatments, especially combinations of injury, caused extreme mortality. Seedlings treated at 6 months after planting suffered greater reductions in height growth than did the older seedlings. Only the severest combinations of injury permanently reduced height growth.Type
textArticle
Language
enISSN
0022-409Xae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.2307/3897879
