Response of Three Shade Tree Species to Grass and Woodchip Mulching

The tree loss in urban areas is of major concern because they represent shortfalls in the management objectives and waste money for replanting programmes. Mulching is considered as the best alternative for enhancing tree growth and to rehabilitate degraded urban soil. This study was carried out t...

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Main Author: Tasan, John
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/10103/1/FH_2002_10.pdf
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author Tasan, John
author_facet Tasan, John
author_sort Tasan, John
collection UPM
description The tree loss in urban areas is of major concern because they represent shortfalls in the management objectives and waste money for replanting programmes. Mulching is considered as the best alternative for enhancing tree growth and to rehabilitate degraded urban soil. This study was carried out to examine the relative growth of 180 transplanted seedlings of Cinnamomum iners, Hopea odorata and Mimusops elengi in response to grass, woodchip and control mulching after 28 months. The data on collar diameter, height, volume, and fine root biomass was analysed using two-way analyses of variance, including comparison of mean values. The results showed that Cinnamomum iners, Hopea odorata and Mimusops elengi showed better diameter, height, volume and fine root growths when treated with the various mulch treatments (p::;;0.05). The reasons for these results are discussed. Generally, it was found that Hopea odorata and Cinnamomum iners have better growth when treated with the grass mulch, while Mimusops elengi showed better growth when treated with the woodchip mulch.
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spelling upm.eprints-101032024-03-13T01:43:30Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/10103/ Response of Three Shade Tree Species to Grass and Woodchip Mulching Tasan, John The tree loss in urban areas is of major concern because they represent shortfalls in the management objectives and waste money for replanting programmes. Mulching is considered as the best alternative for enhancing tree growth and to rehabilitate degraded urban soil. This study was carried out to examine the relative growth of 180 transplanted seedlings of Cinnamomum iners, Hopea odorata and Mimusops elengi in response to grass, woodchip and control mulching after 28 months. The data on collar diameter, height, volume, and fine root biomass was analysed using two-way analyses of variance, including comparison of mean values. The results showed that Cinnamomum iners, Hopea odorata and Mimusops elengi showed better diameter, height, volume and fine root growths when treated with the various mulch treatments (p::;;0.05). The reasons for these results are discussed. Generally, it was found that Hopea odorata and Cinnamomum iners have better growth when treated with the grass mulch, while Mimusops elengi showed better growth when treated with the woodchip mulch. 2002-04 Thesis NonPeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/10103/1/FH_2002_10.pdf Tasan, John (2002) Response of Three Shade Tree Species to Grass and Woodchip Mulching. Masters thesis, Universiti Putra Malaysia. Trees - Growth - Case studies English
spellingShingle Trees - Growth - Case studies
Tasan, John
Response of Three Shade Tree Species to Grass and Woodchip Mulching
title Response of Three Shade Tree Species to Grass and Woodchip Mulching
title_full Response of Three Shade Tree Species to Grass and Woodchip Mulching
title_fullStr Response of Three Shade Tree Species to Grass and Woodchip Mulching
title_full_unstemmed Response of Three Shade Tree Species to Grass and Woodchip Mulching
title_short Response of Three Shade Tree Species to Grass and Woodchip Mulching
title_sort response of three shade tree species to grass and woodchip mulching
topic Trees - Growth - Case studies
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/10103/1/FH_2002_10.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT tasanjohn responseofthreeshadetreespeciestograssandwoodchipmulching