Pruning is often combined with pre-commercial thinning (also called juvenile spacing) in order to increase diameter growth of clear (knot-free) wood. The pruning of lower branches hastens the production of clear wood and ameliorates an undesirable effect of thinning, that is, increased knot size due to prolonged branch retention. Pruning also accelerates other beneficial changes in bole growth related to the relative position of the live crown base. In 1991, a thinning and pruning experiment and a pruning severity trial were established in an 11 year-old coastal Douglas plantation near Chilliwack, B.C.
The experiment was established in 1990 on Vedder Mountain near Chilliwack, B.C.
The thinning and pruning experiment included 3 levels of thinning (no thinning, thin to 500 and thin to 250 trees/ha) and 3 levels of pruning (no prune, prune 250 and prune all stems/ha) arranged in a 3x3 incomplete factorial. The 8 treatments were randomly assigned to sixteen 0.1ha plots established in two separate blocks representing upper and lower slope positions. Thinning was uniform such that the average diameter ratio (d/D) of the trees removed (d) vs. that of the original stand (D) ranged from 0.96 to 1.00. Trees were pruned to a standard 3m lift, or to 50% of tree height on trees less than 6m tall. The prune 250 stems/ha treatment targeted those trees considered future crop trees.
The pruning severity trial was established near the thinning and pruning experiment, using an unreplicated randomized design with four treatments (0, 1, 2 and 4 whorls remaining after pruning). The most severe pruning treatment removed all branches, retaining only stem foliage.
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