Woodland Owner Lunch and Learn - Seedling Genetics and Soil Fertility - know what you are planting and how to care for it
Webinar Details
When:
Sep 16, 2020 12:00 pm US/Eastern
Length: 01:00 (hh:mm)
Advance Registration NOT required.
View now on-demand.
Presenter(s):
- Dr. Kitt Payn, Assistant Professor and Director of the NCSU Cooperative Tree Improvement Program
- Dr. Rachel Cook, Associate Professor and Co-Director of the Forest Productivity Cooperative
Virtual Event Format:
Group Viewing Available:
During each rotation of a planted forest, landowners have a single opportunity to choose the appropriate genetics for their long-term investment. We encourage forest landowners to plant the best genetic quality seedlings possible. The benefits from establishing highly productive families, in combination with good silvicultural practices, will result in large financial returns. Nurseries grow loblolly pine seedlings that have a range in genetic quality. Information about the value of different seedling families can be sourced from seedling vendors as well as from tree improvement cooperatives. The cooperative provides a “third-party” assessment of the productivity, disease resistance, and stem quality of the many families that are available for purchase. An example of this is the loblolly pine Performance Rating System (PRS) developed by the NC State University Cooperative Tree Improvement Program. Information provided through this rating system helps seedling customers make informed decisions when comparing the genetic potential of one family relative to another. Once decisions on seedling genetics are made, at-planting silvicultural decisions will determine the trajectory of the stand and if landowners will capture the potential of selected genetics. Appropriate chemical and/or mechanical site preparation, fertilization, timing, and spacing & density all play critical roles in ensuring the success of a new plantation.
Publications and Resources:
- Forest Soils and Site Index
- Is Reforestation a Profitable Investment? An Economic Analysis
- Reforestation of North Carolina’s Pines
- Planting Your New Stewardship Forest
- Site Preparation Methods and Contracts
- Steps to Successful Pine Plantings
- NC State University Forest Productivity Cooperative
- NC State University Tree Improvement Program
Additional Webinars in the Series
- Timber Sales: Is it time to sell?
- Forest Management Plans, Present Use Valuation and Voluntary Agriculture Districts: What Landonwes Need to Know
- Conserving wildlife through forest management
- Managing Your Woodlands with Prescribed Fire
- Land Ownership, Liability and the Law
- Creating and Maintaining Upland Habitat
- Forest Road, Boundary Line Maintenance and Beaver Management

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