Factors affecting branch wound occlusion and associated decay following pruning – a case study with wild cherry (Prunus avium L.)

Pruning wild cherry (Prunus avium L.) is a common silvicultural practice carried out to produce valuable timber at a veneer wood quality. Sub-optimal pruning treatments can permit un-occluded pruning wounds to develop devaluing decay. The aim of this study is to determine relevant branch, tree and p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jonathan Sheppard, Matthias Urmes, Christopher Morhart, Heinrich Spiecker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Consiglio per la ricerca in agricoltura e l'analisi dell'economia agraria - Research Centre for Forestry and Wood 2016-11-01
Series:Annals of Silvicultural Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cra-journals.cineca.it/index.php/asr/article/view/1193
id doaj-02688c7c9f714b31982725f63dfc12d7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-02688c7c9f714b31982725f63dfc12d72020-11-25T02:46:55ZengConsiglio per la ricerca in agricoltura e l'analisi dell'economia agraria - Research Centre for Forestry and WoodAnnals of Silvicultural Research2284-354X2016-11-0140213313910.12899/asr-1193915Factors affecting branch wound occlusion and associated decay following pruning – a case study with wild cherry (Prunus avium L.)Jonathan Sheppard0Matthias Urmes1Christopher Morhart2Heinrich Spiecker3Albert-Ludwigs-University FreiburgAlbert-Ludwigs-University FreiburgAlbert-Ludwigs-University FreiburgAlbert-Ludwigs-University FreiburgPruning wild cherry (Prunus avium L.) is a common silvicultural practice carried out to produce valuable timber at a veneer wood quality. Sub-optimal pruning treatments can permit un-occluded pruning wounds to develop devaluing decay. The aim of this study is to determine relevant branch, tree and pruning characteristics affecting the occlusion process of pruning wounds. Important factors influencing occlusion time for an optimised pruning treatment for valuable timber production utilising wild cherry are derived. 85 artificially pruned branches originating from ten wild cherry trees were retrospectively analysed. Branch stub length, branch diameter and radial stem increment during occlusion were found to be significant predictors for occlusion time. From the results it could be concluded that for the long term success of artificial pruning of wild cherry it is crucial to (i) keep branch stubs short (while avoiding damage to the branch collar), (ii) to enable the tree to maintain significant radial growth after pruning, (iii) to avoid large pruning wounds (>2.5 cm) by removing steeply angled and fast growing branches at an early stage.http://cra-journals.cineca.it/index.php/asr/article/view/1193High value timber productionwound occlusionstub occlusion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jonathan Sheppard
Matthias Urmes
Christopher Morhart
Heinrich Spiecker
spellingShingle Jonathan Sheppard
Matthias Urmes
Christopher Morhart
Heinrich Spiecker
Factors affecting branch wound occlusion and associated decay following pruning – a case study with wild cherry (Prunus avium L.)
Annals of Silvicultural Research
High value timber production
wound occlusion
stub occlusion
author_facet Jonathan Sheppard
Matthias Urmes
Christopher Morhart
Heinrich Spiecker
author_sort Jonathan Sheppard
title Factors affecting branch wound occlusion and associated decay following pruning – a case study with wild cherry (Prunus avium L.)
title_short Factors affecting branch wound occlusion and associated decay following pruning – a case study with wild cherry (Prunus avium L.)
title_full Factors affecting branch wound occlusion and associated decay following pruning – a case study with wild cherry (Prunus avium L.)
title_fullStr Factors affecting branch wound occlusion and associated decay following pruning – a case study with wild cherry (Prunus avium L.)
title_full_unstemmed Factors affecting branch wound occlusion and associated decay following pruning – a case study with wild cherry (Prunus avium L.)
title_sort factors affecting branch wound occlusion and associated decay following pruning – a case study with wild cherry (prunus avium l.)
publisher Consiglio per la ricerca in agricoltura e l'analisi dell'economia agraria - Research Centre for Forestry and Wood
series Annals of Silvicultural Research
issn 2284-354X
publishDate 2016-11-01
description Pruning wild cherry (Prunus avium L.) is a common silvicultural practice carried out to produce valuable timber at a veneer wood quality. Sub-optimal pruning treatments can permit un-occluded pruning wounds to develop devaluing decay. The aim of this study is to determine relevant branch, tree and pruning characteristics affecting the occlusion process of pruning wounds. Important factors influencing occlusion time for an optimised pruning treatment for valuable timber production utilising wild cherry are derived. 85 artificially pruned branches originating from ten wild cherry trees were retrospectively analysed. Branch stub length, branch diameter and radial stem increment during occlusion were found to be significant predictors for occlusion time. From the results it could be concluded that for the long term success of artificial pruning of wild cherry it is crucial to (i) keep branch stubs short (while avoiding damage to the branch collar), (ii) to enable the tree to maintain significant radial growth after pruning, (iii) to avoid large pruning wounds (>2.5 cm) by removing steeply angled and fast growing branches at an early stage.
topic High value timber production
wound occlusion
stub occlusion
url http://cra-journals.cineca.it/index.php/asr/article/view/1193
work_keys_str_mv AT jonathansheppard factorsaffectingbranchwoundocclusionandassociateddecayfollowingpruningacasestudywithwildcherryprunusaviuml
AT matthiasurmes factorsaffectingbranchwoundocclusionandassociateddecayfollowingpruningacasestudywithwildcherryprunusaviuml
AT christophermorhart factorsaffectingbranchwoundocclusionandassociateddecayfollowingpruningacasestudywithwildcherryprunusaviuml
AT heinrichspiecker factorsaffectingbranchwoundocclusionandassociateddecayfollowingpruningacasestudywithwildcherryprunusaviuml
_version_ 1724755840854917120