71,780 results on '"PLANTATIONS"'
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2. Germination of bud chips 5 varieties of commercial sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum L.) at PT. Gunung Madu Plantation.
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Nuraini, Syarifah, Mahfut, and Bangsawan, Rifki
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GERMINATION , *FACTORIES , *BUDS , *PLANTATIONS , *SUGARCANE , *SOILS - Abstract
Sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum L) is a plantation and industrial plant that has several growth phases, one of which is germination. Germination that occurs starts from day 0 to day 27. The germination phase is a critical phase that has a major impact on future sugarcane growth. The purpose of this study was to determine the germination process of bud chips of 5 commercial sugarcane varieties. The experiment was carried out in March-May 2021 under conditions of high rainfall. There were 5 varieties observed GM-120, GM-25, GM-86; GM-61, and GM-10. Each bud chip was planted using an individual technique with a spacing of 50 cm and covered with soil. carried out until the 27th day after planting. The results showed that among the five varieties observed, varieties GM-120, GM-86, and GM-25 had stable germination, this was indicated by the formation of plant organs at each stage that did not experience significant growth inhibition. Meanwhile, the GM-10 variety had slower germination compared to other varieties, especially in the formation of leaf organs and shoot roots. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Autonomous loose fruit collector (INNBOT) – Human following vehicle.
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Narendran, R., Thiruchelvam, V., Cherskoy, V., Krishna, R., Loong, J. D., and Sivanesan, S. K.
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OIL palm , *MICROCONTROLLERS , *PLANTATIONS , *FRUIT , *SMARTPHONES - Abstract
This project proposes the design of a GPS-based autonomous vehicle for the purpose of navigation and following operators in the collection of loose fruits in oil palm plantations. The aim is to reduce the burden on operators who traditionally must manually collect the loose fruits while following behind a truck. The proposed autonomous vehicle utilizes a GPS module to track its real-time location and follows the operator based on their smartphone's GPS coordinates. The vehicle's navigation is controlled by calculating displacement, bearing, and heading angles using GPS coordinates and a digital compass. The vehicle's movement is determined by the heading-to-bearing ratio, allowing it to move forward, turn left or right, or stop depending on the ratio value. The proposed design includes the selection of appropriate components such as GPS module, digital compass, Bluetooth module, motor driver module, and Arduino Mega 2560 microcontroller. The circuit diagram and prototype of the vehicle are presented. The working principle of the vehicle involves point-to- point navigation, calculation of displacement and bearing angles, and utilization of a digital compass for heading determination. The system has been tested and the results show successful navigation and movement of the vehicle based on the operator's location. However, improvements are needed for real-life deployment and extended operation duration. Overall, the GPS-based autonomous vehicle presents a promising solution for efficient and automated loose fruit collection in oil palm plantations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Optimizing battery management for IoT-power operations in palm oil plantations.
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Ramasenderan, N., Thiruchelvam, V., Sivathasan, R., Ravinchandra, K., Xuan, S. W., Sivanesan, S., and Alexander, C. H. C.
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MOTION detectors , *ENERGY consumption , *STORAGE batteries , *PLANTATIONS , *OPERATIONS management - Abstract
This paper aims to develop a smart solution for powering operations in palm oil plantations without traditional power sources. Batteries step in due to the absence of electrical outlets, managed by an Arduino Uno. Various sensors and devices draw power from these batteries. To tackle battery life concerns, a battery management approach is explored, investigating different battery types and power-saving methods like sleep down modes. Research involves into power bank compatibility with Arduino and strategies to minimize sensor power usage. Rechargeable batteries like power banks and 9V options are favored over solar. Sleep mode integration, triggered by motion sensors, aids energy efficiency, enhancing battery life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Enhancing palm tree oil production through an automated sensory system and IoT monitoring on the Blynk platform.
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Ramasenderan, N., Thiruchelvam, V., Sivathasan, R., Ravinchandra, K., Yahya, A., and Sivanesan, S.
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ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *PALM oil industry , *IRRIGATION scheduling , *PEST control , *SYSTEMS design , *PLANTATIONS - Abstract
This research introduces a user-friendly AI system designed to improve palm oil plantations. The system monitors the plantation's environment using sensors and provides helpful recommendations for irrigation schedules, pest control, and tree health. By analysing historical data and weather conditions, the AI system can predict future trends and guide decision-making. The main purpose is to increase efficiency, productivity, and cost-effectiveness for a thriving and sustainable palm oil plantation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Genetic resources of African mahogany in Brazil: genomic diversity and structure of forest plantations.
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Faria, Júlio Cézar Tannure, Konzen, Enéas Ricardo, Caldeira, Marcos Vinicius Winckler, de Oliveira Godinho, Tiago, Maluf, Luciana Prata, Moreira, Sarah Ola, da Silva Carvalho, Carolina, Leal, Bárbara Simões Santos, dos Santos Azevedo, Cássia, Momolli, Dione Richer, da Costa Pinto Coelho, Gracielle Teodora, de Oliveira, Conceição de Maria Batista, and Soares, Taís Cristina Bastos
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GENETIC variation , *PRINCIPAL components analysis , *GERMPLASM , *NEUTRAL density filters , *GENETIC distance , *PLANTATIONS - Abstract
Background: African mahogany species (Khaya sp.) have been introduced to Brazil gaining increasing economic interest over the last years, as they produce high quality wood for industrial applications. To this date, however, the knowledge available on the genetic basis of African mahogany plantations in Brazil is limited, which has driven this study to examine the extent of genetic diversity and structure of three cultivated species (Khaya grandifoliola, Khaya senegalensis and Khaya ivorensis) and their prospects for forest breeding. Results: In total, 115 individuals were genotyped (48 of K. grandifoliola, 34 of K. senegalensis and 33 of K. ivorensis) for 3,330 filtered neutral loci obtained from genotyping-by-sequencing for the three species. The number of SNPs varied from 2,951 in K. ivorensis to 4,754 in K. senegalensis. Multiloci clustering, principal component analysis, Bayesian structure and network analyses showed a clear genetic separation among the three species. Structure analysis also showed internal structure within each species, highlighting genetic subgroups that could be sampled for selecting distinct genotypes for further breeding, although the genetic distances are moderate to low. Conclusion: In our study, SNP markers efficiently assessed the genomic diversity of African mahogany forest plantations in Brazil. Our genetic data clearly separated the three Khaya species. Moreover, pairwise estimates of genetic distances among individuals within each species showed considerable genetic divergence among individuals. By genotyping 115 pre-selected individuals with desirable growth traits, allowed us not only to recommend superior genotypes but also to identify genetically distinct individuals for use in breeding crosses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Transcriptome dataset of Metroxylon sagu palms from multiple sago plantations in Sarawak.
- Author
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Pendi, Fifi Hafizzah and Hussain, Hasnain
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STUNTED growth , *PHENOTYPES , *TRANSCRIPTOMES , *RNA sequencing , *PLANTATIONS , *PALMS - Abstract
Objective: Sago palm (Metroxylon sagu Rottb.) is one of the most important economic crops abundantly found in Mukah, Sarawak, Malaysia. The robustness of the palm triggered the Sarawak government's selection as one of the state's commodity crops, with the opening of several sago palm plantations. However, stunted (non-trunking) palms were reported in several sago palm plantations despite attaining a maturity period of more than ten years after cultivation. Research targeting this problem has been conducted in various fields, yet information on molecular mechanisms is still scarce. This study aimed to determine the genes responsible for sago palm's normal phenotype (trunking) by attaining leaf transcriptomes from samples of all trunking sago palms from different sago palm plantations. Data description: The conventional CTAB method was employed in the present investigation to extract total RNA from leaf tissues. Transcriptome sequencing was conducted on the Illumina NovaSeq 6000 platform. Differential expression analysis was performed using the DESeq2 package. A total of 6,119 differentially expressed genes, comprising 4,384 downregulated and 1,735 upregulated genes, were expressed in all three sago palm datasets. The datasets provide insights into the commonly expressed genes among trunking sago palms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. An economic analysis of bamboo plantations and feedstock delivered cost in the Southern US for the manufacturing of fiber‐based bioproducts.
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Vivas, Keren A., Vera, Ramon E., Phillips, Richard B., Forfora, Naycari, Azuaje, Ivana, Zering, Kelly, Chang, Hou‐Min, Delborne, Jason, Saloni, Daniel, Dasmohapatra, Sudipta, Barbieri, Carla, Venditti, Richard A., Marquez, Ronald, and Gonzalez, Ronalds
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BIOLOGICAL products , *FEEDSTOCK , *BAMBOO , *INTERNAL rate of return , *PLANTATIONS , *STARTUP costs - Abstract
Bamboo, recognized for its rapid growth, high yield, and fiber performance is prominent in the fiber‐based bioproduct industry. However, the absence of US industrial bamboo plantations for fiber production necessitates reliance on imports or locally manufactured products using imported bamboo fibers, predominantly from China. This study evaluates the economic viability of cultivating bamboo in the Southern US for fiber production, with a case study on hygiene tissue products. The supply‐chain analysis was assessed to calculate bamboo chips' minimum selling price (MSP) at the farm gate for an 8% internal rate of return (IRR). The MSP, influenced primarily by land rental costs, ranges from USD 48 to 55 per bone‐dry metric ton (BDt). Despite an initial establishment cost of ~USD 2 000 ha−1 and profitability by year 5, bamboo is a viable, long‐term fiber alternative. Successful bamboo cultivation in the US could lead to a more sustainable implementation of alternative non‐wood fibers for hygiene tissue applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Biomass Production of the Poplar Clone OP42 During the Second Rotation Plantation–The Effects of Four Thinning Treatments.
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Svystun, Tetiana and Böhlenius, Henrik
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BIOMASS production , *FARMS , *PLANT clones , *ROTATIONAL motion , *PLANTATIONS , *DEAD trees , *POPLARS - Abstract
Poplar (Populus species and their hybrids) plantations can produce large amounts of biomass on agricultural land during the first rotation. However, there is limited knowledge regarding plantation re-establishment through re-sprouting (second rotation) after harvest, stand management options for such plantations, and biomass production during rotation length up to 20 years. In this study, we analysed biomass production responses to thinning treatments in an 18-year-old second rotation poplar plantation in Southern Sweden. The first rotation plantation was established with clone OP42 (Populus maximowiczii A. Henry × P. trichocarpa Torr. and Gray). The thinning experiment was conducted seven years after the first rotation harvest, comprising four treatments: unthinned – 6000 stems ha−1, light thinning – 3000 stems ha−1, medium thinning – 1100 stems ha−1, and heavy thinning – 550 stems ha−1. Eleven years after thinning, standing volume/biomass reached 484 m3 ha−1 (162 Mg DM ha−1) in the unthinned and medium thinning plots, 443 m3 ha−1 (148 Mg DM ha−1) in lightly and 338 m3 ha−1 (113 Mg DM ha−1) in heavily thinned plots. The mean annual increment was not different among the unthinned, light, and medium thinnings, 26 m3 ha−1 yr−1 (9 Mg DM ha−1 yr−1). The total production, including living, dead and removed trees, was highest following the medium thinning, 695 m3 ha−1 (233 Mg DM ha−1). Gradual self-thinning in the unthinned and lightly thinned plots was increased by a drought period. Overall, this study suggests that the second rotation of poplar plantations has high biomass production and provides an alternative to planting after harvest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Beer, "Waste," and One Enslaved Women's Currency in the Lower Mississippi Valley.
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Blake, Jessica
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ENSLAVED women , *SLAVERY , *BEER , *PLANTATIONS , *MARKETPLACES - Abstract
This article examines the life of Marton, an enslaved woman living in eighteenth-century Louisiana. Through her biography, this article uncovers how women of African descent developed marketplaces using the leftovers of the plantation economy. Marton produced beer from scavenged rice. She sold her beer so successfully that enslavers eventually allowed her to sell it outside of the plantation setting. Her materials—fragments of grain—enslavers considered "waste," yet she repurposed the kernels into a commodity, thus opening a narrow avenue of increased autonomy within a repressive slave regime. This work broadens historiographies in economic and women's histories as well as studies of enslavement, revealing how enslaved women adapted to material scarcity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Postcolonial Otherness and Angst in Liberata Masoliver's Efún (1955).
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Nalbone, Lisa
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ACCULTURATION ,20TH century literature ,PLANTATIONS - Published
- 2024
12. Effect of land use on soil macrofauna in Southern Ghana.
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Tetteh, Daniel Ako and Amos, Isaac
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SOIL invertebrates ,INVERTEBRATE populations ,SOIL biodiversity ,PITFALL traps ,SOIL density - Abstract
The study explored the impact of land use changes on soil biodiversity, focussing on soil invertebrates in a converted natural forest. Using parallel transects 1 km in length positioned 200 m apart across cocoa, coffee, and cashew farms and natural forest areas, we sampled soil invertebrates with pitfall traps. The findings reveal a significant decline in soil invertebrate populations in cocoa, coffee, and cashew farmlands compared to natural forest. The number of soil invertebrates recorded in the wet season was generally less than the number found in the dry season. Mean soil invertebrate count in the natural forest was approximately double that of the count in cashew farms. Soil invertebrate density was highest in the dry season in the natural forest and lowest in the cashew farms. The study contributes a holistic understanding of the intricate relationships between land use changes and soil biodiversity, emphasizing the urgency of adopting conservation measures and policy interventions to safeguard the rich diversity of soil ecosystems for future generations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Response of underplanted European beech to shelterwood thinning at the northeasternmost forpost plantation in Europe.
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Matisone, Ilze, Jaunslaviete, Ieva, Adamovičs, Andis, Matisons, Roberts, and Jansons, Āris
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EUROPEAN beech ,TREE height ,SPECIES ,PLANTATIONS ,TREES - Abstract
The projected northwards shift in the distribution suggests an expansion of European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) into the Baltics and an increase of its commercial potential there. Furthermore, recent studies have shown good long-term survival of underplanted, yet non-rereleased beech under the presumedly limiting climate of the eastern part of Latvia, thus supporting the advance of the thermophilic species. Hence, the estimation of the responses of the underplanted beech to shelterwood removal is a logical step in the assessment of the specie's growth potential. To analyse the effect of conventionally managed mature coniferous shelterwood thinning on the growth of underplanted European beech, six thinning treatments (100, 75, and 50% of canopy, second canopy storey, second canopy storey with understorey removed, and the control) were tested in the 33-year-old northeasternmost experimental plantation in Europe. Growth responses were evaluated five years after the treatment, when beech was 38 years old. The survival and growth responses to shelterwood thinning and local characteristics at the tree and stand level were estimated using linear models. The post-treatment survival/mortality was independent, yet the dimensions of beech, particularly stem diameter, were significantly affected by shelterwood thinning intensity (positively). Regarding tree height, the response was somewhat weaker compared to that of stem diameter, while being disproportional to thinning intensity, with moderate thinning having the strongest positive effect. The estimated positive responsiveness of beech to shelterwood thinning suggested increasing growth potential of the species and expansion in the Baltics. Though the responses of beech were moderate probably due to the age and harsher climate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Evaluation of Kinetic and Isotherm Models for Adsorption of Boron Under Different Soil Orders in Oil Palm Plantations of India.
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Premalatha, R. P., Manorama, K., Suresh, K., and Ramachandrudu, K.
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ADSORPTION isotherms , *LANGMUIR isotherms , *OIL palm , *BORON , *PLANTATIONS - Abstract
Adsorption isotherm and kinetic models are essential in predicting the adsorption mechanisms, which helps in boron (B) recommendation at appropriate doses. This study is formulated with the objective of assessing different kinetic and adsorption models for the adsorption of B in different soil orders (Entisol, Alfisol, Inceptisol and Vertisol) in Oil Palm plantations in India. The B adsorption in soils followed the order: Vertisol > Alfisol > Inceptisol > Entisol. The results revealed that, the Langmuir adsorption model fitted well for alfisol (part1 R2 = 0.9912 & part2 R2 = 0.9678), entisol (R2 = 0.9862) and inceptisol (R2 = 0.9924), while the Freundlich model fitted well for vertisol (R2 = 0.9943). The soils under entisol and inceptisol showed linear isotherms whereas, the vertisol and alfisol had curvilinear isotherms and the split Langmuir isotherm was worked out. High bonding energy at the lower part of split isotherm represented stronger retention of B at lower B concentrations. The B equilibrium was attained in 24 h in alfisol and inceptisol, and 12 h in entisol, whereas in vertisol, the equilibrium was not completed until 72 h. From the correlation coefficients obtained from all models, the pseudo-second-order kinetic model explained the B sorption in a better way followed by elovich and power function kinetic models in different soil types. Desorption of B is higher in entisol in most of the added B concentrations. The study suggests a higher rate of B fertilizer application than the recommended in soils having high B adsorption capacity for optimum crop growth and yield. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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15. Mycorrhizal associations modify tree diversity−productivity relationships across experimental tree plantations.
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Luo, Shan, Schmid, Bernhard, Hector, Andy, Scherer‐Lorenzen, Michael, Verheyen, Kris, Barsoum, Nadia, Bauhus, Juergen, Beyer, Friderike, Bruelheide, Helge, Ferlian, Olga, Godbold, Douglas, Hall, Jefferson S., Hajek, Peter, Huang, Yuanyuan, Hölscher, Dirk, Kreft, Holger, Liu, Xiaojuan, Messier, Christian, Nock, Charles, and Paquette, Alain
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FOREST productivity , *FOREST biodiversity , *SPECIES diversity , *PLANTATIONS , *TREES , *VESICULAR-arbuscular mycorrhizas - Abstract
Summary: Decades of studies have demonstrated links between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, yet the generality of the relationships and the underlying mechanisms remain unclear, especially for forest ecosystems.Using 11 tree‐diversity experiments, we tested tree species richness–community productivity relationships and the role of arbuscular (AM) or ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungal‐associated tree species in these relationships.Tree species richness had a positive effect on community productivity across experiments, modified by the diversity of tree mycorrhizal associations. In communities with both AM and ECM trees, species richness showed positive effects on community productivity, which could have resulted from complementarity between AM and ECM trees. Moreover, both AM and ECM trees were more productive in mixed communities with both AM and ECM trees than in communities assembled by their own mycorrhizal type of trees. In communities containing only ECM trees, species richness had a significant positive effect on productivity, whereas species richness did not show any significant effects on productivity in communities containing only AM trees.Our study provides novel explanations for variations in diversity–productivity relationships by suggesting that tree–mycorrhiza interactions can shape productivity in mixed‐species forest ecosystems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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16. The Omnibus Law on Job Creation and its potential implications for rural youth and future farming in Indonesia.
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Sanders, Anna, Khatarina, Josi, Assegaf, Rifqi, Toumbourou, Tessa, Kurniasih, Heni, and Suwarso, Reni
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AGRICULTURE , *AGRICULTURAL intensification , *JOB creation , *PRECARIOUS employment , *LEGISLATIVE amendments , *PLANTATIONS - Abstract
Indonesian rural youth face challenges accessing farmland and sustaining an agricultural livelihood while their labour is not necessarily absorbed by other sectors. In that context, the Omnibus Law on Job Creation (Law 11/2020) promises to liberalise trade and investment across multiple sectors, including agriculture and food security. Combining legal research and political economy approaches to youth and agrarian challenges, we identify amendments to legislation that reduce safeguards for the environment, workers' and farmers' rights and their livelihoods. If fully implemented, the legislative amendments could further narrow youth's options both for secure formal work and futures in farming by accelerating the expansion of infrastructure, industrial plantations and extractive industries that utilise low‐wage labour and huge areas of land. This exposes inconsistencies in the government's approach to increase future food security by promoting intensification of agriculture and attracting youth to farming, while enabling agro‐ and resource extraction that absorbs land yet offers limited and precarious employment prospects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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17. Aboveground and belowground biogeochemical niche separation between woody and herbaceous species explains their coexistence in subtropical plantations.
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Yuan, Ye, Wang, Huimin, and Dai, Xiaoqin
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COEXISTENCE of species , *PLANT species , *COPPER , *RHIZOSPHERE , *PLANTATIONS , *TRACE elements - Abstract
Background and aims: The differences in multi-elemental concentrations among plant species provide insightful information for understanding species coexistence in forest ecosystems, known as the biogeochemical niche separation. As most of the studies focused on leaf elemental concentrations, it is unclear whether belowground fine roots exhibit biogeochemical niche separation and whether there are close linkages of elemental concentrations among leaves, fine roots and rhizosphere soils. Methods: Nine element (N, P, K, Ca, Mg, Mn, Zn, Cu, and Fe) concentrations in leaves, fine roots and rhizosphere soils were measured for three tree species, three woody shrub species, and three herbaceous species in three subtropical plantations. Results: Elemental concentrations in leaves and fine roots were significantly different between woody and herbaceous species. Notably, the elemental concentrations differed more significantly for leaves than for fine roots, which indicated that leaves, as the most metabolically active tissues, tended to maintain their unique elemental concentrations within a particular functional type. Despite the different elemental needs between leaves and fine roots, most elemental concentrations of leaves were closely associated with those of the fine roots, highlighting the relationship between leaf and root ecological processes. Elemental concentrations in leaves or fine roots were not significantly correlated with those of the rhizospheres. Conclusions: There is evidence for biogeochemical niche separation between coexisting woody and herbaceous species to avoid competition. Our results generalized the biogeochemical niche hypothesis to belowground tissues, which offered new insights into a better understanding of species evolution and coexistence in ecosystems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Racial hydrologies: Protecting plantation perimeters in the South Carolina Lowcountry.
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Walter, Brian
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HYDROLOGY , *PLANTATIONS , *FLOODS , *DIKES (Engineering) , *SEA-walls - Abstract
In the South Carolina Lowcountry, near‐annual hurricanes and record‐breaking sea levels have led to disastrous flooding, overwhelming the region's historical tidal infrastructures and entrenched racial geographies. In response, Lowcountry governments, institutions, and residents have undertaken efforts at "perimeter protection," raising dikes and seawalls to safeguard selected urban and rural plantation spaces from tidal flooding. Although perimeter protection is presented as a neutral resilience strategy, its practices and material forms reveal a close relationship between coastal protection and efforts to preserve landscapes of white supremacy. Such logics of perimeter protection contrast with everyday affective encounters with eroding coastlines and with the futures outside of bounded edges imagined by Black Charlestonians. By situating the region's hydrological history within the legacy of slavery and plantation extraction, and by following the effects of current sea level rise, we can see how historical hydrologies—which in this case are also racial hydrologies—are entangled with landscapes of contemporary environmental injustice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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19. Optimistic growth of marginal region plantations under climate warming: Assessing divergent drought resilience.
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Li, Jitang, Xie, Yuyang, Camarero, Jesús Julio, Gazol, Antonio, González de Andrés, Ester, Ying, Lingxiao, and Shen, Zehao
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GLOBAL warming , *CLIMATE change , *CLIMATE extremes , *BLACK locust , *TREE age - Abstract
Given the context of significant global warming and the intensification of extreme climate events in the last century, large‐scale reforestation and afforestation have been recognized as effective strategies to mitigate the climate crisis. Since the 1970s, China has launched several afforestation programs aimed at regional ecological protection, playing an important role in reaching carbon neutrality by 2060. This study provided a detailed analysis of the growth suitability of the main planted conifers (Pinus sylvestris var. mongolica and Pinus tabulaeformis) and broadleaves (Populus spp., Robinia pseudoacacia) in the semi‐arid northern China. We compared the radial growth trends of plantations and their responses to extreme droughts from 1980 to 2018. Growth of most plantations has significantly increased over time, but broadleaves showed recent growth reductions in the past decade, which may be related to tree age and reduced soil moisture. Nevertheless, under warmer climate scenarios, the growth of plantations is forecasted to continue increasing. Broadleaves showed a better post‐drought recovery, probably linked to their anisohydric behavior, than conifers, which presented a better resistance to drought. Growth of conifers depended more on warmer temperature and better precipitation conditions during the growing season, whereas broadleaves mainly reacted to warm temperature. Additionally, pre‐drought growth levels weakened resilience components, while post‐drought precipitation compensated for drought‐induced growth deficit. Growth and resilience were negatively related to tree age, while higher stand density reduced growth. This assessment and projections of growth and drought resilience indicate the sustainability of most plantations in semi‐arid regions, but future warmer and drier conditions may lead to an uncertain future regarding forest health and reduce their carbon sink potential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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20. Placing animals in the Plantationocene: The plantation after/lives of nutria in Eastern Germany.
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Adolphi, Lukas and Fleischmann, Larissa
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PLANTATIONS ,GERMAN Unification, 1990 ,INTRODUCED species ,VALUE (Economics) - Abstract
Nutria (Myocastor coypus), also known as coypu or 'river rats', are big semi-aquatic rodents that originate from South America and were shipped to Europe for fur production in the late 1800s. Today, the animals live in wild populations in many places around the globe. One of these places is the Eastern German city of Halle is where they have been able to establish themselves in large populations along the river Saale. This article situates the history and presence of nutria in Eastern Germany in the Plantationocene. The Plantationocene concept regards the plantation as a structuring feature of our present. In the plantation, humans and nonhumans are separated, hierarchically ordered and exploited along different power axes, so that standardised, scalable production becomes possible. In this sense, we argue that the nutria farms of the German Democratic Republic (GDR) followed plantation logics that resembled that of 'actual' plantations and that exploited their forced animal labour for fur production. With German reunification, however, nutria lost their economic value and, in many cases, were simply released to save on 'disposal costs'. Outside the nutria farms, they developed plantation afterlives, where similar logics continued to exert violence on their bodies, such as in their recent classification as 'invasive alien species', but were also challenged in a number of ways. Taking cue from recent discussions on the Plantationocene, this article can be considered as an intervention and invitation to move beyond the plantation in the literal sense of the term, so as to study how the Plantationocene works across different species, spaces and times, while being attentive to its limitations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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21. Development, Integration, and Field Experiment Optimization of an Autonomous Banana-Picking Robot.
- Author
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Chen, Tianci, Zhang, Shiang, Chen, Jiazheng, Fu, Genping, Chen, Yipeng, and Zhu, Lixue
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AUTONOMOUS robots ,LABOR costs ,FIELD research ,ROBOTS ,PLANTATIONS ,BANANAS ,DEEP learning - Abstract
The high growth height and substantial weight of bananas present challenges for robots to harvest autonomously. To address the issues of high labor costs and low efficiency in manual banana harvesting, a highly autonomous and integrated banana-picking robot is proposed to achieve autonomous harvesting of banana bunches. A prototype of the banana-picking robot was developed, featuring an integrated end-effector capable of clamping and cutting tasks on the banana stalks continuously. To enhance the rapid and accurate identification of banana stalks, a target detection vision system based on the YOLOv5s deep learning network was developed. Modules for detection, positioning, communication, and execution were integrated to successfully develop a banana-picking robot system, which has been tested and optimized in multiple banana plantations. Experimental results show that this robot can continuously harvest banana bunches. The average precision of detection is 99.23%, and the location accuracy is less than 6 mm. The robot picking success rate is 91.69%, and the average time from identification to harvesting completion is 33.28 s. These results lay the foundation for the future application of banana-picking robots. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Estimation of changes in carbon sequestration and its economic value with various stand density and rotation age of Pinus massoniana plantations in China.
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Bai, Yunxing and Ding, Guijie
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CARBON sequestration , *VALUE (Economics) , *CARBON cycle , *PLANTATIONS , *PINE , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
Plantations actively participate in the global carbon cycle and play a significant role in mitigating global climate change. However, the influence of forest management strategies, especially planting density management, on the biomass carbon storage and production value of plantations for ensuring carbon sink benefits is still unclear. In this study, we estimated the carbon sequestration and economic value of Pinus massoniana plantations with various stand densities and rotation ages using a growth model method. The results revealed that with increasing stand age, low-density plantations at 2000 trees·ha−1 (358.80 m3·ha−1), as well as high-density plantations at 4500 trees·ha−1 (359.10 m3·ha−1), exhibited nearly identical standing volumes, which indicated that reduced inter-tree competition intensity favors the growth of larger trees during later stages of development. Furthermore, an increase in planting density led to a decrease in the average carbon sequestration rate, carbon sink, and number of trees during the rapid growth period, indicating that broader spacing between trees is favorable for biomass carbon accumulation. Further, extending the rotation period from 15 to 20 years or 25 years and reducing the optimal planting density from 3000 to 2000 trees·ha−1 increased the overall benefits of combined timber and carbon sink income by 2.14 and 3.13 times, respectively. The results highlighted that optimizing the planting density positively impacts the timber productivity and carbon sink storage of Pinus massoniana plantations and boosts the expected profits of forest managers. Thus, future afforestation initiatives must consider stand age and planting density management to shift from a scale-speed pattern to a quality-benefit design. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Introduction to Geography and the Plantationocene.
- Author
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Wolford, Wendy
- Subjects
- *
RACE discrimination , *GEOGRAPHY , *PLANTATIONS , *SCHOLARS , *FORUMS - Abstract
The concept of the Plantationocene has received increasing interest in recent years across a variety of academic fields. This article introduces a forum in which seven scholars debate the relevance of the concept for their own work. This introduction outlines the contributions of the concept for the field of geography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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24. Assessing Borneo's tropical forests and plantations: a multi-sensor remote sensing and geospatial MCDA approach to environmental sustainability.
- Author
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Suab, Stanley Anak, Supe, Hitesh, Louw, Albertus Stephanus, Korom, Alexius, Mohd Rakib, Mohd Rashid, Yong Bin Wong, Kemarau, Ricky Anak, and Avtar, Ram
- Subjects
TROPICAL forests ,REMOTE sensing ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,PLANTATIONS ,PALM oil - Abstract
The assessment of environmental sustainability is of utmost importance for the forests and plantations in Borneo, given the critical need for environmental protection through the identification and mitigation of potential risks. This study was conducted to assess the environmental sustainability of tropical forest and plantations landscape, a case study in northern Sabah, Malaysian Borneo. Applications of the latest high-resolution multi-sensor remote sensing and geospatial MCDA are cost-effective and useful for large-scale environmental sustainability assessment. The land use land cover (LULC) of the study area was mapped with synergistic use of Sentinel-1 Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) and Sentinel-2 optical and high-resolution PlanetScope satellite imageries, resulting in overall accuracy of 87.24%. Five sustainability indicator layers: slope erosion protection, river buffer, landscape connectivity and quality, high conservation value (HCV), and water turbidity were developed from the LULC map, ancillary datasets of SRTM, and forest operation basemap with reference to standards from the Environment Protection Department (EPD), Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), and Forest Management Plan (FMP) for the analysis using multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA) model. The results revealed that overall, the study areas are in the high sustainability category at 61%, medium at 31%, and low at only 8%. We analyzed the environmental sustainability of five land use boundaries, and the results showed that Industrial Tree Plantations (ITP) and Village Reserve are mostly in the high category. Meanwhile, oil palm plantations, rubber plantations, and forest reserve (FR) are the majority in the medium category. Both oil palm and rubber plantations are a majority in the medium class due to monocropping land use type having low landscape connectivity and quality individual sustainability indicator layer. The study presented the concept of use of multi-sensor remote sensing for LULC mapping with geospatial MCDA for environmental sustainability assessment useful to stakeholders for improving the management plan also contributing toward the progress of achieving UNSDGs and addressing REDD+. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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25. Multi-Omics Approaches in Oil Palm Research: A Comprehensive Review of Metabolomics, Proteomics, and Transcriptomics Based on Low-Temperature Stress.
- Author
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John Martin, Jerome Jeyakumar, Song, Yuqiao, Hou, Mingming, Zhou, Lixia, Liu, Xiaoyu, Li, Xinyu, Fu, Dengqiang, Li, Qihong, Cao, Hongxing, and Li, Rui
- Subjects
- *
METABOLOMICS , *OIL palm , *MULTIOMICS , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of cold temperatures , *TRANSCRIPTOMES , *PROTEOMICS , *OILSEED plants , *PLANTATIONS - Abstract
Oil palm (Elaeis guineensis Jacq.) is a typical tropical oil crop with a temperature of 26–28 °C, providing approximately 35% of the total world's vegetable oil. Growth and productivity are significantly affected by low-temperature stress, resulting in inhibited growth and substantial yield losses. To comprehend the intricate molecular mechanisms underlying the response and acclimation of oil palm under low-temperature stress, multi-omics approaches, including metabolomics, proteomics, and transcriptomics, have emerged as powerful tools. This comprehensive review aims to provide an in-depth analysis of recent advancements in multi-omics studies on oil palm under low-temperature stress, including the key findings from omics-based research, highlighting changes in metabolite profiles, protein expression, and gene transcription, as well as including the potential of integrating multi-omics data to reveal novel insights into the molecular networks and regulatory pathways involved in the response to low-temperature stress. This review also emphasizes the challenges and prospects of multi-omics approaches in oil palm research, providing a roadmap for future investigations. Overall, a better understanding of the molecular basis of the response of oil palm to low-temperature stress will facilitate the development of effective breeding and biotechnological strategies to improve the crop's resilience and productivity in changing climate scenarios. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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26. Plant distribution, ecological traits and diversity patterns of vegetation in subtropical managed forests as guidelines for forest management policy.
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Waheed, Muhammad, Haq, Shiekh Marifatul, Arshad, Fahim, Bussmann, Rainer W., Hashem, Abeer, and Abd_Allah, Elsayed Fathi
- Subjects
PHYTOGEOGRAPHY ,VEGETATION & climate ,FOREST management ,PLANT diversity ,PLANT communities - Abstract
Forest vegetation is an important component of forest ecosystems, contributing to terrestrial plant diversity while also providing a variety of ecological services. In managed landscapes, plantations emerge as dominant kinds after stand-replacing disturbances. However, the dynamics of vegetation cover, diversity, and composition in plantation forests remains poorly understood in the subtropical region. Our study recorded a rich floral diversity with 173 angiosperm species, characterized by varying life forms and distinct flowering phenology. The uneven distribution of species across families demonstrated the complexity of the ecosystem, with Poaceae being dominant. Diversity patterns among different plantation types varied, with Dalbergia sissoo and Populus nigra plantations exhibiting higher species richness and diversity. Conversely, Eucalyptus camaldulensis and Morus alba plantations displayed lower diversity, emphasizing the influence of plantation type on biodiversity. Non-metric multidimensional scaling (nMDS) and PERMANOVA analyses revealed significant dissimilarity patterns of vegetation composition. Indicator species analysis identified unique compositions within each plantation type, emphasizing the importance of conserving specific types to protect indicator species and maintained ecological distinctiveness. Canonical Correspondence Analysis (CCA) demonstrated that road accessibility, stem cutting, and fire significantly influenced plant distribution patterns. The present research underscored the importance of considering plantation type in forest management for biodiversity conservation and highlighted the environmental variables' influence on the formation of plant communities. These results provided major implications for sustainable forest management and conservation efforts in tropical regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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27. Effects of thinning and understory removal on soil phosphorus fractions in subtropical pine plantations.
- Author
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Zunji Jian, Lixiong Zeng, Lei Lei, Changfu Liu, Yafei Shen, Jiajia Zhang, Wenfa Xiao, and Mai-He Li
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PHOSPHORUS in soils ,FOREST management ,FOREST dynamics ,FOREST productivity ,PLANTATIONS - Abstract
Forest management changes the physical environments and nutrient dynamics and then regulates the forest productivity. Soil phosphorus (P) availability is critical for productivity in tropical and subtropical forests. However, it was still poorly understood howsoil P content and fraction respond to various forest management practices in these regions. Here, we measured the soil total P, available P, and Hedley's P fractions, including inorganic and organic P (Pi and Po), in subtropical pine plantations treated with understory removal (UR), non-dominant species thinning (NDST) and dominant species thinning (DST) after nine years. Compared to plantations without management (CK), treatments such as UR, NDST, and DST decreased soil total P at 0--10 cm and soil available P at 0-- 10 cm and 10--20 cm. Increases in resin-Pi, NaOH-Pi, and C.HCl-Pi resulted in a higher total Pi in 0--10 cm (p < 0.05) in treated plots (UR, NDST, and DST) than in CK plots. UR, NDST, and DST treatments increased NaHCO3-Po and NaOH-Po (p < 0.05) but decreased C.HCl-Po at a depth of 0--10 cm. Regardless of management treatments, soil total P, available P, and P fractions in 0--10 cm showed higher contents than those in 10--20 cm. There were positive relationships between total P and total Po (p < 0.01) and between available P and total Pi. There were also positive relationships between total P, available P, NaHCO3-Pi, and NaOH-Pi (p < 0.05). In conclusion, forest management such as UR, NDST, and DST decreased soil total P and available P, and transforming soil P fractions to available P will meet the P demand following management in the pine plantations of subtropical China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Time-course study of genetic changes in periodontal ligament regeneration after tooth replantation in a mouse model.
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Ohshima, Jun, Abe, Shotaro, Morita, Masayoshi, Tanaka, Nobutake, Yamaguchi, Masaya, and Hayashi, Mikako
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- *
TOOTH replantation , *PERIODONTAL ligament , *OLFACTORY receptors , *G protein coupled receptors , *LABORATORY mice , *PLANTATIONS , *AMELOBLASTS - Abstract
This research focused on analyzing gene expression changes in the periodontal ligament (PDL) after tooth re-plantation to identify key genes and pathways involved in healing and regeneration. Utilizing a mouse model, mRNA was extracted from the PDL at various intervals post-replantation for RNA sequencing analysis, spanning from 3 to 56 days. The results revealed significant shifts in gene expression, particularly notable on day 28, supported by hierarchical clustering and principal component analysis. Gene ontology (GO) enrichment analysis highlighted an upregulation in olfactory receptor and G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathways at this time point. These findings were validated through reverse transcription-quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR), with immunochemical staining localizing olfactory receptor gene expression to the PDL and surrounding tissues. Moreover, a scratch assay indicated that olfactory receptor genes might facilitate wound healing in human PDL fibroblasts. These results underscore the importance of the 28-day post-transplant phase as a potential "tipping point" in PDL healing and regeneration. In conclusion, this research sheds light on the potential role of olfactory receptor genes in PDL regeneration, providing a foundation for developing new therapeutic approaches in tooth replantation and transplantation, with broader implications for regenerative medicine in oral health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Variable-density thinning designs for harvester-based operations in Northern Europe.
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Brunner, Andreas
- Subjects
- *
TREE crops , *CELL size , *CONIFERS , *FORESTS & forestry , *PLANTATIONS - Abstract
Variable-density thinning (VDT) can be used to start the conversion of young homogeneous conifer plantations to the single-tree selection system. A design for VDT is presented, which is adapted to harvester-based operations in northern Europe without prior tree marking and the low target diameters in the region. Six treatment cells with a size of 10 × 10 m are placed along a 30 m stretch of a strip road with treatments gap (removing all but understory trees), skip (no thinning), and four treatment cells with crop tree-based crown thinning, which removes two dominant competitors of 1–4 crop trees per cell. Skips might in later thinnings be converted into gaps, which is why skips and gaps are placed systematically in the 2 × 3 treatment blocks. Assignment of the crop tree number variants to treatment cells are decided by the harvester operator based on the given stand structure and presence of crop trees meeting all selection criteria. So far, five operations have confirmed the practicality of this design and given some insight into the learning process of harvester operators with these new methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Experimental study of an agricultural machine for pneumatic oil-bearing rose harvesting.
- Author
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Bozhkov, Snezhan
- Subjects
- *
AGRICULTURAL equipment , *HARVESTING machinery , *ROSES , *HARVESTING time , *PLANTATIONS - Abstract
In the cultivation of the oil-bearing rose, only the harvesting of the flowers in the rose plantations is completely manual. Research on the mechanization of the harvesting operation has been going on for the past few years. Partially improving the working conditions and speeding up the harvesting operation are provided by the developed technical means for transporting the hand-picking flowers pickers and their collected produce in the rows of the plantations with the oil-bearing culture. The attempt to fully mechanize the harvesting operation through the creation of a rose harvester that only picks off the petals was received skeptically by the specialists in the rose-producing branch both from the point of view of functional suitability and due to doubts about the economic inexpediency of the development. Preservation of the traditional hand-picking method of picking off the rose flower under the ovary, picking off the flowers to be harvested without injuring the adjacent undissolved buds and foliage, limiting to a minimum the contact with the thorns on the rose stems and stinging insects, etc., advantages provides a newly developed agricultural machine for pneumatic harvesting in oil-bearing rose plantations, field test results of which are presented in the paper. Experimentally established during the testing of two of its variants (one-row and two-row) are the advantages of machine picking over traditional manual picking -- better working conditions for the pickers, complete harvesting of the rose flowers to be picked for the day, higher productivity. The main factors (the condition of the rose plantation, the amount of blooming rose flowers, the qualification of the rose pickers) on which the efficiency of the pneumatic rose harvesting machine depends are determined. The ability to ensure the productivity of the tractor/implement combination formed on the basis of the two-row variant of the machine, with which, within the speci- fied time range to harvest the production from plantations with an area of 1.2 ha and more, has been proven. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
31. Eco-Efficiency of Pellet Production from Dedicated Poplar Plantations.
- Author
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Sperandio, Giulio, Suardi, Alessandro, Acampora, Andrea, and Civitarese, Vincenzo
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- *
WOOD pellets , *GREENHOUSE gases , *RENEWABLE energy sources , *PLANTATIONS , *POPLARS , *POWER resources , *FUELWOOD - Abstract
Biomass, due to its neutrality in terms of greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere during its life cycle, is considered an interesting renewable source for energy production as an alternative to the use of more polluting fossil fuels. Among the different wood fuels, pellets are convenient for use in dedicated stoves, and pellet heating systems have a high energy efficiency. The aim of this work was to estimate the economic and global warming potential (GWP100a) generated along the thermal energy supply chain of wood pellets, starting from the production of raw biomass from dedicated poplar cultivations and ending with the use of pellets in stoves by the end-user to produce thermal energy and ash. The Eco-Efficiency Indicator (EEI) was used to link the economic and environmental performance for eight proposed scenarios, obtained by combining different levels of mechanisation for poplar harvesting and wood biomass management before arrival at the pellet plant. For the thermal energy produced by the poplar wood pellet, the GWP100a ranged from 1.5 × 10−2 to 2.1 × 10−2 kg CO2−eq MJ−1 for three-year-old plantations and from 1.9 × 10−2 to 2.4 × 10−2 kg CO2−eq MJ−1, for six-year-old plantations. In terms of eco-efficiency of the baseline scenario (EEIb), the most favourable scenarios remain those linked to the use of biomass from three-year-old poplar plantations, with EEIb values ranging from 0.31 to 0.60 € kgCO2−eq−1, compared to from 0.29 to 0.36 € kgCO2−eq−1 for pellets obtained from biomass produced from six-year-old poplar plantations. In terms of the Global Eco-Efficiency Indicator (EEIg), which also takes into account the positive effect on the reduction of greenhouse gases due to the storage of carbon in the soil by the plantations and the reduction of emissions from avoided fossil fuels, the most favourable scenarios remain those linked to the use of biomass from three-year-old poplar plantations, with EEIg values that vary in the range of 0.60 ÷ 1.04 € kgCO2−eq−1, compared to 0.55 ÷ 0.62 € kg CO2−eq−1 for thermal energy obtained using biomass from six-year-old poplar plantations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Termites and maize crops: assemblage composition, damage level, and varietal sensitivity in contrasting agro-ecological zones of the Republic of Benin.
- Author
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Loko, Yêyinou Laura Estelle, Toffa, Joelle, Orobiyi, Azize, Gavoedo, Dieudonné Martin, Dansi, Alexandre, Tamò, Manuele, and Roisin, Yves
- Subjects
- *
CONTRAST sensitivity (Vision) , *TERMITES , *CORN , *PLANTATIONS , *CROPS , *TRANSECT method - Abstract
Termites are considered as important pests of maize plantations in Republic of Benin. However, very little information is available on their assemblage composition, abundance, damages, and on the sensitivity of common maize varieties in Benin. This study aims to fill these gaps and provide baseline for the development of an integrated termite management in maize plantations. Therefore, 60 maize fields across 30 villages located in four agro-ecological zones of southern Benin were prospected using the standardized method of belt transects. In addition, the resistance of five maize varieties to termite attacks was evaluated on-farm during two consecutive seasons (2018 and 2019). Fifteen termite species belonging to 11 genera, 6 subfamilies and 3 families were collected in the prospected maize fields. Four species (Macrotermes subhyalinus Rambur, Coptotermes sjostedti Holmgren, Amitermes evuncifer Silvestri, and Trinevitermes germinatus Wasmann) were found in all agro-ecological zones with A. evuncifer as the most abundant species. High similarity indices of termite assemblages were found between the four agro-ecological zones. Wood-feeders group and species nesting in hypogeal nests were the mostly abundant in all agro-ecological zones. The attack rate of termites in maize fields was 16.9% and did not vary significantly between agro-ecological zones. A. evuncifer and C. sjostedti were significantly the most destructive species on the five evaluated varieties, although Trinevitermes oeconomus Trägardh was most abundant in leaf sheaths; M. subhyalinus and Macrotermes bellicossus Smeathman in the stem; Pseudacanthotermes militaris Hagen and Odontotermes sp. in the roots. Termite damage level to maize depended of the variety. Korga variety was classified as highly resistant to termite attacks; Agbadé kouin winiwini variety as resistant; Igbado tchakpa variety as moderately resistant. While, Elèkpèrè and Forkui varieties were classified as highly susceptible. The three maize varieties identified as resistant to termite attack should be included in the development of an integrated termite management program and in future breeding programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The succession patterns and drivers of soil bacterial and fungal communities with stand development in Chinese fir plantations.
- Author
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Zhang, Yun, Chen, Yuepeng, An, Bo, Ma, Xiangqing, Zhang, Hui, Liu, Qianguang, and Mao, Rong
- Subjects
- *
BACTERIAL communities , *FUNGAL communities , *CHINA fir , *PLANTATIONS , *SOIL microbiology , *FIR - Abstract
Background: Soil microbial community composition with stand development may be changed due to the variations in canopy structure, understory vegetation, root traits, edaphic conditions, and litter inputs. However, it is still uncertain to what extent these biotic and abiotic factors shape the soil microbial community composition in Chinese fir (Cunninghamia lanceolata) plantations, which are widely planted in southern China. Methods: Amplicon sequencing was used to analyze the diversity and composition of soil bacterial and fungal communities at two soil depths across four developmental stages of Chinese fir plantations. Results: Both the bacterial and fungal communities were significantly different between stand age groups. As stand aged, oligotrophic bacteria decreased in abundance while copiotrophic bacteria increased. Meanwhile, fungal functional groups connected to plants decreased in abundance while that of saprotrophic fungi significantly increased. The variance in bacterial community was mainly attributed to soil variables regarding carbon and nutrient availability, whereas the greatest fraction of fungal community dissimilarity was determined by plant-specific factors such as aboveground stand structure and tree root traits. The chemical composition of litter had a major effect on the soil fungal community, whereas the litter traits had no effect on the bacterial community. Conclusions: The potential drivers of soil fungi and bacteria differ in Chinese fir plantations. By accounting for the impacts of various environmental components, it is possible to anticipate the response of soil bacterial and fungal assemblages to forest management regime implemented in Chinese fir plantations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Can faster growth compensate for increased mortality in subtropical dry forest fragments?
- Author
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Moscato, Vanessa, McDonald, William J. F., Balle‐Hosking, Birte, and Dwyer, John M.
- Subjects
- *
TROPICAL dry forests , *FOREST resilience , *TREE growth , *PLANTATIONS , *TREE farms , *COMMUNITY forests , *TREE mortality - Abstract
Capturing the effects of fragmentation and ongoing changing climate on the population dynamics of long‐lived trees requires long‐term datasets, but these are uncommon in rainforests and dry forests outside of the tropics.This study capitalised on nine 0.04‐ha permanent plots established in 1982 within corridors of old‐growth subtropical dry forest (Araucarian vine forest) retained as fire breaks within forestry plantations in Imbil (southern Queensland, Australia). Tree diameter growth and survival were censused in 1997 and 2021, resulting in two monitoring periods.The most recent period was associated with an increasing trend in vapour pressure deficit (VPD). Consistent with this trend, we found that survival was substantially lower across all size classes in the second period.Mortality‐induced reductions in stem density were associated with faster growth rates in all but the largest stems in the second period. Growth was also moderately faster in plots near forest edges in the second period.The richness of obligate understory species declined significantly by an average of 1.44 species over the 40‐year study period.Synthesis and applications: Overall, our results are consistent with increasing tree mortality rates reported recently for the Australian wet tropics and suggest widespread and alarming impacts of increasing VPD on rainforest and dry forest community dynamics. To increase forest resilience in a changing climate, we recommend the retention of a buffer of plantation trees adjacent to old‐growth forest corridors; widening the forest corridors using faster‐growing species identified in this study and maintaining connections between scrub breaks and larger tracts of forest for species dispersal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Time series prediction of insect pests in tea gardens.
- Author
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Chen, Xuanyu, Hassan, Md. Mehedi, Yu, Jinghao, Zhu, Afang, Han, Zhang, He, Peihuan, Chen, Quansheng, Li, Huanhuan, and Ouyang, Qin
- Subjects
- *
INSECT pests , *PLANTATIONS , *TIME series analysis , *STANDARD deviations , *PEST control - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tea‐garden pest control is crucial to ensure tea quality. In this context, the time‐series prediction of insect pests in tea gardens is very important. Deep‐learning‐based time‐series prediction techniques are advancing rapidly but research into their use in tea‐garden pest prediction is limited. The current study investigates the time‐series prediction of whitefly populations in the Tea Expo Garden, Jurong City, Jiangsu Province, China, employing three deep‐learning algorithms, namely Informer, the Long Short‐Term Memory (LSTM) network, and LSTM‐Attention. RESULTS: The comparative analysis of the three deep‐learning algorithms revealed optimal results for LSTM‐Attention, with an average root mean square error (RMSE) of 2.84 and average mean absolute error (MAE) of 2.52 for 7 days' prediction length, respectively. For a prediction length of 3 days, LSTM achieved the best performance, with an average RMSE of 2.60 and an average MAE of 2.24. CONCLUSION: These findings suggest that different prediction lengths influence model performance in tea garden pest time series prediction. Deep learning could be applied satisfactorily to predict time series of insect pests in tea gardens based on LSTM‐Attention. Thus, this study provides a theoretical basis for the research on the time series of pest and disease infestations in tea plants. © 2024 Society of Chemical Industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Cultivation of honeybush (Cyclopia spp.) in neo-colonial and multispecies landscapes of South Africa.
- Author
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Ndwandwe, Sthembile, Juba, Roderick, and Sephton, Matthew
- Subjects
- *
DOMESTICATION of plants , *INDIGENOUS plants , *WILD plants , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *ARCHIVAL research - Abstract
The indigenous wild plants of Southern Africa are intertwined with human cultures, histories and livelihoods. By focusing on commercial cultivation of a wild plant, honeybush (Cyclopia spp.), an indigenous plant that is endemic to parts of South Africa, we discuss changing colonial relations of domination and alienation affecting its use by local communities. We draw from an interdisciplinary study of honeybush conducted in the Western Cape and Eastern Cape provinces of South Africa, which included archival research, life history interviews, participant observation and a review of honeybush cultivation science. Anna Tsing's notion of non-scalability and a multispecies critique of plant domestication guides our analysis of the changing relations and approaches to honeybush use. We show the impact these changes exert on human and human-non-human relations. We conclude that the persistence of scalable projects in the commercial use of honeybush sustains and reconfigures relations that strengthen the alienation of (certain) humans from nature. Our interdisciplinary research highlights how historical violence continues to be subsumed in plant domestication and commercialisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Characteristics of teak trees and stands driving infestations by Xyleutes ceramica (Walker, 1865) (Lepidoptera: Cossidae) in plantations in Thailand.
- Author
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Choochuen, Thanapol, Foit, Jiří, Meunpong, Ponthep, and Suksavate, Warong
- Subjects
- *
TEAK , *LEPIDOPTERA , *PLANTATIONS , *TREES , *DEAD trees , *STEM borers - Abstract
The teak bee‐hole borer (Xyleutes ceramica (Walker, 1865)) is widespread in northern Thailand and is considered the most serious pest of teak (Tectona grandis) in the country. The present study investigated the factors affecting the infestation of teak trees by this species in three plantations in northern Thailand at different spatial scales, including the tree, plot and stand levels. At each plantation, 48 plots evenly distributed in three different young stands (1–10 years), three medium‐aged stands (11–20 years) and six old stands (exceeding 20 years) were sampled. At the plots, the number of current entrance holes of X. ceramica per teak tree was counted, and the characteristics of the trees and stands were assessed. A total of 1952 teak trees were sampled, 22.7% of which were infested by X. ceramica. According to our results, infestation was much more strongly affected by stand characteristics than by the characteristics of individual trees. Above all, understorey cover exhibited substantial effect with the infestation level being strongly limited in stands with dense understories. Additionally, young and medium‐aged stands on better quality sites were found to be the most susceptible to infestation, and well‐growing and/or damaged trees were preferred by the pest species. In conclusion, major recommendations for suppressing damage caused by X. ceramica include (a) promoting and maintaining the understorey above 30% cover, (b) planting mixed stands of commercial forest trees and (c) intensively monitoring the pest in young and medium‐aged stands, especially those growing at good‐ and medium‐quality sites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Effects of needle cast diseases on the growth of a 33-year-old Douglas-fir provenance plantation in northwestern Bulgaria.
- Author
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Georgieva, Margarita, Petkova, Krasimira, and Molle, Emil
- Subjects
- *
PLANTATIONS , *DOUGLAS fir , *TREE growth , *DEFOLIATION , *INDIVIDUAL differences , *NEEDLES & pins - Abstract
In this study, the effects of defoliation caused by fungal pathogens on the tree vitality and growth of a 33-year old Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) provenance plantation in northwestern Bulgaria was presented. The results of the conducted surveys in 2011 and 2020 showed that there were significant differences between the individual provenances of Douglas-fir concerning their susceptibility to the needle cast diseases, caused by the fungal pathogens Rhabdocline pseudotsugae and Phaeucryptopus gaeumannii. The extent of damage, expressed as the amount of Douglas-fir needles cast, varied among provenance groups in individual years. A serious degree of defoliation was assessed among all continental provenances. In 2011, all examined trees from the group of continental provenances had severe symptoms of the needle cast disease. In 71.5% of them, the defoliation of the crowns was over 25% – moderately to severely affected. The average degree of defoliation varied from 18.3% (32 Wаrm Springs) to 89.3% (55 Alamogordo). In 2020, severe defoliation was found among all continental provenances. Both fungal pathogens were found as causes of the defoliation of 64.3% of the trees. The growth indicators: average height, average diameter at breast height, average height- and diameter increment for survived provenances in 2011 (at age 24) and 2020 (at age 33) were evaluated. The loss of needles and the reduced physiological function of the trees affected their vitality in the following years. Relationships between the average current annual height and diameter increment by provenance groups for 2003–2011 and 2011–2020 were calculated. It was found that with an increase in the degree of defoliation, the height and diameter increment of the provenances decreases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. 互叶白千层及其混交林主要害虫 群落多样性及发生动态.
- Author
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赵鹏飞, 余玉珠, 李艳枝, 郭萍, 花育宁, 吴香丽, and 常明山
- Subjects
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PEST control , *MIXED forests , *NUMBERS of species , *EARWIGS , *PLANTATIONS , *EUCALYPTUS - Abstract
(Objective) The present paper aimed to clarify the diversity, distribution, and occurrence dynamics of the main pest communities in pure plantations of Melaleuca leucadendron and its mixed plantations with Eucalyptus plantations and Podocarpus macrophyllus in Guangxi, providing a basis for the cultivation of M. leucadendron and green non-pollution pest control. (Method In 2023, the planting areas of M. leucadendron in Qinzhou, Guangxi were investigated, mainly through route surveys and standard plot surveys, supplemented by fixed-point monitoring, regular surveys and indoor rearing observations. The study focused on the composition, diversity and occurrence dynamics of the main pest communities in M. leucadendron and its mixed plantations. (Result) There were 28 species of main pests belonging to 22 families in M. leucadendron plantations, including Hemiptera, Lepidoptera, Coleoptera, Orthoptera, Dermaptera and Thysanoptera, with the highest numbers of pests in the Lepidoptera and Hemiptera. Higher numbers were found in M. leucadendron Eucalyptus mixed plantations, with significant damage to leaves by Euricania ocellus, Bombotelia sp., Strepsicrates coriariae, Jankowskia fuscaria and Hyalopterus arundimis. Among the three types of stands, B. jocosatrix caused the most severe damage in the mixed plantations, the highest number of pest species was found in the mixed forests of M. leucadendron P. macrophyllus and the pest diversity was the lowest in the pure stands. The pest occurrence dynamics were more stable and the damage was less severe in the M. leucadendron x P. macrophyllus mixed plantations. There were differences in the abundance of pests and Chaol index among different stand types, with the M. leucadendron Eucalyptus mixed plantations having a higher pest abundance and Chaol index. The occurrence dynamics of B. jocosatrix and M. phaseoli varied among different stands, with the earliest outbreaks of B. jocosatrix in the M. leucadendron Eucalyptus mixed plantations and M. phaseoli in the pure M. leucadendron stands. (Conclusion】 Mixed plantations of M. leucadendron with different species can help improve pest occurrence and diversity, with the M. leucadendron x P. macrophyllus mixed plantations reducing the occurrence of major pests among the three stand types. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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40. Soil Characteristics of Casuarina, Eucalyptus, Melia and Teak Plantations in Tamil Nadu, India.
- Author
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Prabha, A. C. Surya, Rajkamal, A., Senthivelu, M., and Pragadeesh, S.
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- 2024
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41. An exploratory study of the immediate and medium-term effects of bench terrace construction on the ground-dwelling arthropod communities in eucalypt plantations.
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Martins, Martinho A. S., Simões, Liliana B., Puga, João R. L., Keizer, J. Jacob, and Abrantes, Nelson J. C.
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EUCALYPTUS ,TERRACING ,PLANTATIONS ,ARTHROPODA ,ARTHROPOD diversity ,SPRING ,ECOSYSTEMS - Abstract
Forest terracing operations imply a massive mobilization of topsoil. Nonetheless, its impacts on soil properties, functions and ecosystem services have been poorly quantified so far. Therefore, this study aimed to explore how bulldozer bench terracing may impact the abundance and diversity of ground-dwelling arthropod communities of eucalypt plantations. To this end, three neighbouring sites were selected of which one had not been terraced a –(NT), one had been terraced recently (two months earlier; -RT) and one had been terraced more than a decade (14 years ago; OT). The exploratory nature of this study involved furthermore a single sampling occasion (during spring), and taxonomic identification till the level of order and, in the case of the most frequent orders, (sub-)family. The arthropod communities of the RT site and the NT site did not reveal significant differences in terms of either total abundance or order richness, suggesting that immediate effects of terracing on these aspects of biodiversity may be limited. Nonetheless, notable differences did exist between these two sites for two out of the three prevailing orders. Araneae occurred with a markedly lower abundance as well as family richness at the RT site than at the NT site, while the opposite was true for the Coleoptera, at least in terms of family richness. The communities of the RT site and the OT site also did not evidence substantial differences in abundance or order richness, indicating that terracing effects on these aspects may not increase with time-since-terracing. In fact, the opposite was suggested, since none of the three prevailing orders revealed significant differences in abundance or richness between the two sites. In spite of the reduced effects observed here of massive soil mobilization by bulldozer terracing, further research is plainly justified not only because of the exploratory nature of this study but also the widespread bench terracing in the study region. The present results suggested that such further research should focus on the impacts during the first decade. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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42. Tropical timber plantations as habitat for ground‐dwelling mammals: A camera‐trapping assessment in Central Panama.
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Monteza‐Moreno, Claudio M., Grote, Mark N., Hall, Jefferson S., and Jansen, Patrick A.
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PLANTATIONS ,CORRIDORS (Ecology) ,TEAK ,MAMMALS ,HABITATS - Abstract
Reforestation projects in the tropics often consist of plantations, typically monocultures of non‐native timber species. It has been questioned whether such plantations are suitable as wildlife habitat, but empirical evidence is scarce, especially on plantations embedded on highly disturbed landscapes. Here, we compare species richness and occupancy of ground‐dwelling mammals between five types of plantations within a single area in Central Panama, the narrowest tract of the Mesoamerican Biological Corridor. We deployed camera traps at stratified random points and followed a hierarchical modeling approach to compare community composition and occupancy between plantation types. We found a total of 16 ground‐dwelling mammals in the area, most of which were small‐bodied and short‐lived, and the majority of species' occupancy probabilities were below 0.5 at any given plantation. Teak (Tectona grandis) plantations, which covered the largest area in the study, had the lowest estimated richness and occupancy, with occupancy probabilities exceeding 0.5 for just three species. Conversely, plantations of the native Pachira quinata and the non‐native Gmelina arborea, covering an area four and nineteen times smaller than Teak, respectively, had higher richness and occupancy. Occupancy values were intermediate in the Acacia and mixed plantation types. Our findings suggest that plantations embedded in lowland tropical landscapes have limited conservation value for large‐bodied mammals, and are ecologically constrained habitats for small‐ and medium‐sized mammals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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43. Tropical montane forest (Shola) tree species can regenerate under abandoned exotic tree plantations in the Western Ghats of India.
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Schmerbeck, Joachim, Saha, Somidh, Srimathi, Anjana, Einhellinger, Birgit, and Hangsing, Mamang
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EUCALYPTUS ,TROPICAL forests ,PLANTATIONS ,FOREST regeneration ,FOREST restoration ,FOREST biodiversity ,SPECIES ,MOUNTAIN forests - Abstract
Whether environmental conditions under exotic tree plantations abandoned in the Western Ghats of India can facilitate the natural regeneration of tropical montane forest (Shola forest) tree species is being debated. In many cases, the exotic tree plantations are being cleared to allow for the restoration of native ecosystems. In this paper, we examined whether exotic tree plantations have indeed a negative effect on the regeneration of Shola forest tree species. For this, we assessed the abundance, diversity, and composition of the regeneration of Shola forest tree species in plantations, each with different dominant tree species (Acacia mearnsii , Pinus sp. and Eucalyptus sp.). We tested the abundance of regenerating native tree species against the main plantation canopy species (plantation type) as well as other environmental factors (aspect, distance to nearest Shola forest, structural diversity, slope, elevation, presence of herbivores, and canopy closure). We found that the number of native tree species regenerating in all plantation types was at an acceptable level: 1960, 1773, and 462 individuals ha
−1 for Acacia , Eucalyptus , and Pinus plantations, respectively. A rare fraction analysis showed that the highest number of Shola tree species were regenerating under Acacia mearnsii (25) followed by Eucalyptus (19) and Pinus (8) plantations. The density and diversity of regenerating Shola trees was greatest under Acacia plantations and northern aspects but declined with increasing elevation. The presence of herbivores also reduced the density and diversity of Shola tree regeneration. We concluded that the restoration of Shola forest in the Western Ghats is possible in existing stands of exotic tree species and this process can be accelerated with appropriate silvicultural methods. We additionally recommend that studies involving long-term exclosures can provide valuable insights into the effects of browsing on regeneration and species composition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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44. Effects of hydrothermal-microwave treatment on bending properties of teak in plantation.
- Author
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Donghai Huang, Huajie Shen, Jilin Zhang, Xinzhen Zhuo, and Liangzhou Dong
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MICROWAVE heating ,TEAK ,PLANTATIONS ,WATER temperature ,TEMPERATURE effect - Abstract
In order to study the bending properties of tropical tree species rich in organic extracts, the effects of temperature and time on the bending performance of hydrothermal treatment were investigated. The effects of power and time on bending performance under microwave heating conditions were investigated. It is found that the chemical composition does not undergo obvious degradation at 80°C-100°C, and the bending performance gradually becomes better with the increase in heating time; when the hydrothermal time exceeds 4 h, the bending performance varies with heating time. The growth is better than the difference, reaching the maximum at 4 h. When the water temperature is 140°C, the bending performance is negatively correlated with the heating time. When the hydrothermal treatment time is the same, the bending property becomes better as the temperature increases. The most reasonable process for microwave softening heating is with a power of 480 W and a heating time of 4 min. A softening treatment method combining water heat and microwave can achieve a better softening effect. When the final moisture content is controlled to 8%, the bending setting effect is the best. The optimum drying time is 6 h, and the optimum drying temperature is 50℃. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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45. Dynamics of experimental plantations of Tachigali vulgaris in response to fertilization and soil texture.
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Teixeira, Roberthi Alef Costa, Lima, Michael Douglas Roque, Silva, Arystides Resende, Gonçalves, Delman de Almeida, Moreira, Leo Jakson da Silva, de Miranda, Rodrigo Otávio Veiga, Dias Junior, Ananias Francisco, Tomazello-Filho, Mario, Soares, Alvaro Augusto Vieira, and Protásio, Thiago de Paula
- Subjects
SOIL texture ,SANDY loam soils ,CLAY soils ,WOOD ,PLANTATIONS - Abstract
The diversification of species for bioenergy silviculture in Amazonia will help several local and/or regional industrial segments. Thus, the expansion of knowledge on silvicultural practices of Tachigali vulgaris will support future commercial-scale plantations in Amazonia. This study aimed to evaluate possible differences in diameter, height, and wood volume of T. vulgaris trees grown under different nutritional doses, on two soil texture classes. In addition, we sought to determine the appropriate nutritional dose for the studied types of soil texture aiming at the production of energy wood. The study was conducted in two experimental areas of 1.6 ha each, located in the municipality of Almeirim – Pará, Brazil. Independent analyses were performed in both experimental areas at each age. The experiments were set up in a randomized block design with four blocks. A factorial scheme considering four phosphorus and three potassium doses were adopted, totaling 12 treatments. The diameter at 1.30 m (DBH), equivalent diameter, total height of the trees, and the commercial wood volume with bark per hectare (V
wb ha−1 ) were evaluated. A significant effect of nutrient doses was reported on DBH at the age of 2 years for the soil with a sandy loam texture. The Vwb ha−1 of the trees at 4, 5, and 6 years old was significantly affected by fertilization in clayey soils. Under the conditions of the present study, the nutritional doses of 0 kg ha−1 of triple superphosphate and 172 kg ha−1 of potassium chloride are recommended for the area with Oxisol of sandy loam texture and 195 kg ha−1 of triple superphosphate and 343 kg ha−1 of potassium chloride are recommended for the area with Oxisol of clayey texture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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46. Above and belowground carbon stock of pine plantations and native oak forests coexisting in central Spain.
- Author
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van den Bor, Bram, Castro-Díez, Pilar, and Alonso, Álvaro
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ALEPPO pine ,CARBON cycle ,OAK ,PINACEAE ,ALLOMETRIC equations ,PINE ,PLANTATIONS - Abstract
Promoting nature-based carbon sinks may contribute to minimise global warming. Different forest types may have different carbon sink capacity. Many areas of central Spain are covered by coexisting patches of monospecific plantations of Pinus halepensis, established since the 1960's, and native Quercus forest coppiced up to the 1960´s. We aimed to compare the carbon stock between both types of forests, considering both above and belowground compartments. In each plot, we measured the dimensions of every adult tree, the shrub cover, and we collected samples of litter and soil. The carbon pool of trees and shrubs was calculated using allometric equations, and for roots, litter, and soil, using the carbon content analysed in a laboratory or obtained from the literature. Carbon pools were analysed separately for three independent variables: plot type (Quercus/Pinus), tree basal area and slope. Overall, Quercus forests stored more carbon than Pinus plantations, thanks to a larger carbon stock in roots and shrubs in the former, which compensated for the larger aboveground carbon stock in tree biomass of Pinus plots. The carbon stock increased with basal area in all compartments except the soil. The carbon allocation pattern across compartments greatly varied between the two forest types, Pinus plots storing more than half (55%) of its carbon in the aboveground biomass of trees, while Quercus storing more carbon belowground (60%) in roots and soil. Given that belowground carbon stock is more resistant against disturbances, we conclude that native Quercus forests are more suitable for a long-term carbon storage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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47. Responses of non-structural carbohydrate content to different stand densities and configurations in poplar plantations.
- Author
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Cao, Penghe, Wang, Weifeng, Xu, Xuan, Li, Li, Yu, Shuiqiang, Wu, Yongbo, Xue, Jianhui, Wang, Yuchao, and Wang, Miao
- Subjects
POPLARS ,FOREST resilience ,CARBOHYDRATES ,PLANT spacing ,PLANTATIONS - Abstract
Non-structural carbohydrate (NSC) reserves constitute the critical cornerstone of forest resilience to adversity and post-disaster recovery. Planting densities and configurations affect the growth and physiological processes of trees and are essential to investigate the effects of planting densities and configurations on the storage and allocation of NSC in trees for afforestation strategies. We investigated the seasonal dynamics of NSC in various organs (leaves, branches, stems, coarse roots, and fine roots) of Populus sp. in a stand density experiment located on the western bank of Hongze Lake, Jiangsu, China to assess the whole-tree carbon budget. We used a nested sampling design of stands with density as the first factor, which included two levels [400 vs. 277 stems per hectare (sph)], and spacing configuration (square vs. rectangular) as the nested factor. Our results indicated that the seasonal characteristics of NSC in poplar were obvious, with NSC in storage organs being consumed for growth from March to May and gradually accumulating after July, peaking in November, with the highest fluctuations in branches and stems. The NSC pool was dominated by starch (72.73 ± 4.28%), and the stems (65.49 ± 5.43%) contributed more than half of the whole-tree starch pool, and the branches were the largest sugar pool (39.88 ± 8.36%). The seasonal patterns in poplar NSC were similar across different planting densities and configurations, whereas the NSC pool size varied significantly across configurations. Low planting density (277 sph) with square configuration increases NSC storage to optimum levels at the individual and stand scales. A square configuration with low intraspecific competition might be an optimal afforestation practice to enhance carbon sequestration in poplar plantations located in temperate monsoon climates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. C stocks in abandoned short rotation forestry (SRF) plantations in Central Italy.
- Author
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Alessandro, Paletto, Enrico, Ceotto, Claudia, Becagli, Alessandro, Casagli, Maria, Manici Luisa, and Isabella, De Meo
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SHORT rotation forestry ,WOOD products ,BLACK locust ,PLANTATIONS ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,FOREST restoration ,POPLARS - Abstract
At the end of the last century, European Union (EU) energy policies encouraged the use of dedicated short rotation forestry (SRF) plantations in member countries in which fast-growing woody species are grown for energy purposes. Recently, in Italy some SRF plantations developed in the 90s have been abandoned or managed more extensively for economic and environmental reasons. However, these abandoned plantations can play a key role in biodiversity conservation and carbon storage. The present study is aimed to estimate carbon stock (C-stock) in living biomass and deadwood in three abandoned SRF plantations in Central Italy. The C-stock was estimated in three different 20-years SRF plantations (hybrid poplar, willow, black locust) located on the same site and unmanaged for 15 years. The results show a C-stock considering three of five C pools equal to: 47.30 MgC ha
−1 for hybrid poplar (65.3% in biomass and 34.7% in deadwood respectively), 23.02 MgC ha−1 for willow (77.6% and 22.4% respectively), and 80.41 MgC ha−1 for black locust (95.9% and 4.1% respectively). Outcomes of this research offer support for the forest restoration practices of similar abandoned SRF plantations. The application of extensive management techniques and the development of the naturalization process will ensure the role of biodiversity reservoir of these plantations, helping their evolution toward semi-natural systems mainly oriented to biodiversity conservation and climate change mitigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Quantification of Nocturnal Water Use and Its Composition in a Eucalyptus urophylla × E. grandis Plantation on the Leizhou Peninsula, South China.
- Author
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Wang, Zhichao, Du, Apeng, Liu, Siru, Xu, Yuxing, Zhu, Wankuan, and Xiang, Wenhua
- Subjects
WATER use ,EUCALYPTUS ,WEATHER ,PLANTATIONS ,PENINSULAS ,ACQUISITION of data - Abstract
Nocturnal water use (Qnight) is an important component of the eucalyptus water budget, but it has always been under‐appreciated and poorly understood. To improve the accuracy of water balance estimates and the understanding of the nocturnal water use process in eucalypts plantations, we conducted a 3‐year study to investigate the characteristics of Qnight and its components in an E. urophylla × E. grandis plantation in southern China. The results showed that the Qnight of E. urophylla × E. grandis was substantial and the ratio of nocturnal to daily water use (Rnight) was on average 12.35%, with higher Rnight (14.97%) in the dry season than in the wet season (9.50%). The Qnight includes two components, nocturnal transpiration (Tn) and nocturnal refilling (Re), which are driven by different factors. Nocturnal Re‐Tn dynamics were controlled by a combination of nocturnal environmental factors that drive Tn and corresponding daytime environmental factors that drive daytime transpiration. Therefore, the compositional ratios of Tn and Re differed between weather conditions and months. We developed a novel method to distinguish between Re and Tn and quantified the dynamics of their ratios. We found that on a 3‐year average, the Qnight of E. urophylla × E. grandis was mainly used for Tn (58.63%). Our results highlight the non‐ignorability of Qnight and the high variability of the compositional ratios of Re and Tn, and suggest that Qnight and its components should be accurately quantified and considered when studying the water balance in eucalyptus stands. Plain Language Summary: Eucalyptus is one of the world's most important fast‐growing tree species. Its nocturnal water use plays an important role in many physiological activities. However, it has been neglected and poorly understood due to its relatively low abundance and the difficulty in distinguishing its composition. We analyzed the nocturnal water use of E. urophylla × E. grandis on the Leizhou Peninsula, South China, by using accurate monitoring data collected between 2019 and 2021, and developed a novel method to distinguish the components of nocturnal water use ‐ nocturnal transpiration and stem refilling. We found that nocturnal water use by E. urophylla × E. grandis was substantial. The dynamics of its two components were influenced by a combination of daytime and nocturnal environmental factors, resulting in large weather and monthly variations in their proportions. On average, however, nocturnal transpiration remained the major nocturnal water use of E. urophylla × E. grandis. Our results highlight the non‐neglectability of nocturnal water use in eucalypt hydrological budgets and the importance of accurately quantifying its components, and provide a new quantification method, which can help us improve the accuracy of water budgets and our understanding of nocturnal water use processes. Key Points: The nocturnal water use of E. urophylla × E. grandis accounts for about 12.35% of the daily water use and therefore cannot be ignoredNocturnal Re‐Tn dynamics are controlled by a combination of daytime and nocturnal environmental factorsNocturnal water use in E. urophylla × E. grandis is mainly for nocturnal transpiration [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Variations in the Forest Productivity of Pinus patula Plantations in Tanzania: The Need for an Improved Site Classification System.
- Author
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Maguzu, Joshua, Ilstedt, Ulrik, Katani, Josiah Zephaniah, and Maliondo, Salim S. M.
- Subjects
FOREST productivity ,TREE farms ,FOREST management ,PLANTATIONS ,PINE - Abstract
The productivity of forests in sub-Saharan Africa is often summarized into large compartments or site classes. However, the classification of forest productivity levels based on the original site index model in Tanzania and the techniques applied to generate the model did not include the micro-toposequence variations within compartments. This may create false expectations of wood supply and hinder the estimation of sustainable harvesting processes. This study analyzed variations in forest productivity and the site index in P. patula stands in two forest plantations of Tanzania to assess the applicability and generality of the present site classification system. We used dominant height as a proxy for forest productivity in 48 plots at the Sao Hill forest plantation (SHFP) and 24 plots at the Shume forest plantation (SFP). We stratified the sampling plots in each site class along the soil catena and recorded the elevation, slope, and slope positions (summit, mid, and lower). Our results showed that the site classes did not generally match the previously assigned site classes and the productivity of a given site class varied between the two plantations. We found a consistently higher productivity than that implied by the original site index in SFP, while in SHFP, the productivity was both higher and lower than estimated in different compartments. Both elevations and slope significantly contributed to predicting the productivity variations within site classes. Overall, the results indicate that physiographic factors affect variations in forest productivity within the assigned site classes. We recommend a more comprehensive site productivity assessment that takes into account physiographic variations and hence provides more accurate information for sustainable forest plantation management in Tanzania and in the region at large. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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