1 / 25

Critical Period Threshold Study

Critical Period Threshold Study. Effects of up to Five Years of Consecutive Weed Control Relative to Growth Losses from Delaying Weed Control for Douglas-fir and Other PNW Conifer Species. Introduction.

decker
Download Presentation

Critical Period Threshold Study

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Critical Period Threshold Study Effects of up to Five Years of Consecutive Weed Control Relative to Growth Losses from Delaying Weed Control for Douglas-fir and Other PNW Conifer Species

  2. Introduction • What is the relative efficacy of continuous weed control through 3, 4 or 5 growing seasons after planting ? • What growth loses, if any, result from delaying vegetation control for a year or two after planting? • Douglas-fir, western hemlock, western red cedar, and grand fir -Multiple years of vegetation control -Delayed vegetation control -Different sites -Different vegetation types and climatic influences

  3. Methods- Study design • Randomized block split-plot with 4 blocks of 8 treatments per conifer species • OOOOO, TOOOO, TTOOO, TTTOO, TTTTO, TTTTT, OTTTT and OOTTT • Plots- 36 seedlings planted in a grid with 10 ft x 10 ft spacing, surrounded by a row of buffer trees. • 4 sites representing different geoclimatic zones with different vegetation communities and climatic conditions.

  4. Sites • 2000 Installation • Central Coast Range Location • -Starker Forest ground west of Corvallis, OR • -All four species of interest (Douglas-fir, western hemlock, western red cedar, and grand fir) • 2001 Installations • Spruce Hemlock Coastal Forest • -Weyerhaeuser ground near Seaside, OR • -(Douglas-fir and western hemlock) • Low elevation western Cascade • Cascade Timber Consulting ground near Sweet Home, OR • (Douglas-fir and western red cedar) • Drier Southern Coast Range • Roseburg Resources ground near Riddle, OR • (Douglas-fir and grand fir)

  5. Zone 1-Starker Zone 2- Seaside Zone 4- Sweet Home Zone 3- Riddle (Roseburg)

  6. Planting Stock • All seedlings were large container stock (Styro 15’s ) with fertilizer in media. • Grown at Plum Creek Nursery (Cottage Grove) • Goal was to plant stock as uniform as possible.

  7. Operational Control • Target- No more than 25 % cover • Mechanical Site Prep- all sites • Excavator piling and removal of obvious shrub clumps • All remaining hardwood clumps sprayed until dead. • Chemical Site Prep- T’’’’ • Fall Oust (2oz), Escort (.5oz) and Accord. Other herbicides added if needed. • Follow-up Weed Control- • Spring Atrazine and Transline applications

  8. Weed Control

  9. Weed Control Efficacy

  10. Results- Starker Site Douglas-fir Volume growth maximized - TTT’’ or TTO’’ TTT’’ improved third-year volume by over 150% relative to OOO” Either 2-year treatment improved volume growth relative to the best 1-year treatment by 59% No differences—OTT’’ vs. TTO’’ or TOO’’ vs. OOT

  11. Results- Starker sitegrand fir TTT’’ improved grand fir volume growth by 47% relative to the best 2-year treatment and by 477% relative to OOO’’ (TTO’’) resulted in greater volume than either one-year treatment. No differences – OTT’’ vs. TTO’’ or TOO’’ vs. OOT’’

  12. Results- Starker site- western red cedar • No differences between TTT’’, OTT’’ and TTO’’ • OTT’’ improved volume growth compared (TOO’’) by 107% • TTT’’ increased volume relative to OOO’’ by 452% • One-year treatments were not statistically different from OOO’’ • No differences—OTT’’ vs. TTO’’ or TOO’’ vs. OOT’’

  13. Results- Starker Site Western Hemlock • Volume maximized by TTT’’, OTT’’ or TTO • TTT’’ increased volume by 142% relative to OOO’’ • TTO’’ improved volume growth relative OOT’’ by 73%. • Again, no differences –OTT’’ vs. TTO’’ or TOO’’ vs. OOT

  14. Starker Site Mortality

  15. Seaside Results • Douglas-fir • No differences in volume or height among treatments. • Western hemlock • Volume and diameter not significantly affected by weed control • (TT’’’) increased diameter relative to plots that were not treated the first year (OT’’’ and OO’’’). • TO’’’ and TT’’’ reduced height growth relative to OO’’’.

  16. Seaside Mortality

  17. Sweet Home Results • Western red cedar • TT’’’ and TO’’’ increased volume, height and diameter relative to OT’’’ or OO’’’ • Douglas-fir • TT’’’ increased volume, diameter and height relative to all other treatment combinations • No differences in any parameter between one-year treatments (OT’’’ vs. TO’’’) • Both OT’’’ and TO’’’ improved diameter growth relative to OO’’’

  18. Sweet Home Mortality

  19. Roseburg Results • Douglas-fir • TT’’’ and OT’’’ increased diameter and volume relative to TO’’’ and OO’’’ • TO’’’ did not differ from OO’’’ in volume, diameter or height. • Grand fir • TT’’’ and OT’’’ increased both diameter and volume relative to TO’’’ and OO’’’ • TO’’’ did not differ from OO’’’ in volume, diameter or height.

  20. Roseburg Mortality

  21. Summary of Results • Starker, Sweet Home and Roseburg sites- • -growth increased with increasing years of weed control. • Seaside - few differences in volume, height or diameter apparent after 2 years • Comparison of treatments with equal number of years of weed control- TTO’’ vs. OTT’’ , OOT’’ vs. TOO’’ and OT’’’ vs. TO’’’ • -Western red cedar at Sweet Home- only instance in which the earlier application of weed control benefited volume growth. • - Douglas-fir and grand fir at Roseburg- applying weed control the second year rather than the first year resulted in increases in diameter and volume. • -All other cases- no differences between equivalent-number-of- year treatments.

  22. Discussion Competing vegetation has been slow to fully colonize some sites Weed Cover on never-treated plots: -Starker- 31 to 36% year 1, 68 to 81% year 2 and 84 to 90% year 3 -Seaside- 20 to 25% year 1 and 53 to 59% year 2 -Roseburg- 39 to 41% year 1 and 46 to 53% weed cover year 2. -Sweet Home- 63 to 70% year 1 and 82 to 83% year 2. 2001 vs. 2002 Rainfall

  23. Results- Starker Site Douglas-fir 2000 2001

  24. Questions Raised • Do we need to apply site-prep and/or first-year herbicide treatments in all cases? • If not, can we develop a model to forecast herbicide efficacy for a given season? • Is large container stock better suited to compete with first-year weeds than other stock types?

More Related