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Effects of Silviculture and Genetics on Branch/Knot Attributes of Coastal Pacific Northwest Douglas-Fir and Implications for Wood Quality—A Synthesis

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Title Effects of Silviculture and Genetics on Branch/Knot Attributes of Coastal Pacific Northwest Douglas-Fir and Implications for Wood Quality—A Synthesis
Names Lowell, Eini C. (creator)
Maguire, Douglas A. (creator)
Briggs, David G. (creator)
Turnblom, Eric C. (creator)
Jayawickrama, Keith J. S. (creator)
Bryce, Jed (creator)
Date Issued 2014-07-22 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and published by MDPI. The published article can be found at: http://www.mdpi.com/journal/forests.
Abstract Douglas-fir is the most commercially important timber species in the US Pacific
Northwest due to its ecological prevalence and its superior wood attributes, especially
strength and stiffness properties that make it highly prized for structural applications. Its
economic significance has led to extensive establishment and management of plantations
over the last few decades. Cultural treatments and genetic improvement designed to
increase production of utilizable wood volume also impact tree morphology and wood
properties. Many of these impacts are mediated by crown development, particularly the
amount and distribution of foliage and size and geometry of branches. Natural selection for
branch architecture that optimizes reproductive fitness may not necessarily be optimal for
stem volume growth rate or for wood properties controlling the quality of manufactured
solid wood products. Furthermore, Douglas-fir does not self-prune within the rotation lengths currently practiced. This paper synthesizes extensive Douglas-fir research in the
Pacific Northwest addressing: (1) the effects of silviculture and genetics on branch
structure and associated consequences for wood quality and the product value chain; and
(2) methods to measure, monitor, modify, and model branch attributes to assist managers in
selecting appropriate silvicultural techniques to achieve wood quality objectives and
improve the value of their Douglas-fir resource.
Genre Article
Access Condition http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/
Topic Douglas-fir
Identifier Lowell, E. C., Maguire, D. A., Briggs, D. G., Turnblom, E. C., Jayawickrama, K. J. S., & Bryce, J. (2014). Effects of Silviculture and Genetics on Branch/Knot Attributes of Coastal Pacific Northwest Douglas-Fir and Implications for Wood Quality—A Synthesis. Forests, 5(7), 1717-1736. doi:10.3390/f5071717

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