HortTechnology (Mar 2020)

Effects of Pruning at Planting on Pecan Trunk Development and Total Shoot Growth

  • Frederic B. Ouedraogo,
  • B. Wade Brorsen ,
  • Jon T. Biermacher ,
  • Charles T. Rohla

DOI
https://doi.org/10.21273/HORTTECH04535-19
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 2
pp. 248 – 250

Abstract

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Pecan (Carya illinoinensis) trees were pruned using varying intensities at planting to determine the effect of pruning on trunk development and shoot growth. Data on trunk diameter, number and length of shoots, as well as the total shoot growth were recorded annually from a completely randomized design experiment that assigned 0%, 50%, and 75% pruning of above-ground height to single-trunk transplants. The results suggest that pruning intensity has little effect on trunk diameter. The pruned trees had fewer shoots initially and more growth per shoot, leading to a difference of 7 cm/shoot higher for the 50% pruning group than the control group and to a difference of 11 cm/shoot higher for the 75% pruning group compared with the control group. The total length of all shoots was not significantly different across treatments. Because previous research has sometimes shown that pruning increases tree survival and this research shows that trees can recover from pruning, there is no need to change the current recommendation of pruning seedlings at planting.

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