Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

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Tree structure Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida http://hort.ufl.edu/woody/planting

Transcript of Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Page 1: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Tree structureTree structure

By Edward F. Gilman

Department of Environmental Horticulture

University of Floridahttp://hort.ufl.edu/woody/planting

Page 2: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Tree Structure

What’s the Problem?

Page 3: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

What is good structure?

1. Forest grown vs. open grown tree

2. Codominant stems

3. Good branch attachment

4. Structurally sound tree

Outline of topics

Page 4: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

1. Forest grown tree

• How do they develop on their own?

vs..

Open grown tree

Page 5: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Trees in the forest grow with one trunk, and codominant stems toward the top of the tree

Page 6: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Codominant stems form far up into the canopy on most forest trees

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Open grown trees

• Canopy develops low on the trunk

• Canopy spreads wide

• Tree is often wider than tall

Page 8: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Its party time for all

Its all about access to sunlight

Page 9: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .
Page 10: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Appears to be a nice tree

Page 11: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Close-up of base of tree

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Same tree five years later

Huge crack

Page 13: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

“Fall down go boom tree”

Keep an eye on this side of the tree

Page 14: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

“I thought I heard something creak last night”

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What is good structure?

1. Forest grown vs. open grown tree

2. Codominant stems

3. Good branch attachment

4. Structurally sound tree

Outline of topics

Page 16: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

2. Codominant stems

Stems nearly same diameter

Page 17: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .
Page 18: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

“Elephant ears”

These are weak

Severely acute angle

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Why are they a problem?

Included barkbeginning to form

Page 20: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Bark inclusion

Decay anddiscolorationfrom selfwounding

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Bark inclusion

Near-normal wood formation

Closed crack indicating inclusion

Page 22: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Bark inclusion

Closure crack indicating inclusion

Page 23: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Bark inclusion(Not a codominant stem!)

Page 24: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Close-up of closure crack

Page 25: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

What is good structure?

1. Forest grown vs. open grown tree

2. Codominant stems

3. Good branch attachment

4. Structurally sound tree

Outline of topics

Page 26: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

3. Good branch attachment

• How does a BRANCH form?

• What are the indicators?

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Page 28: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .
Page 29: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Branch bark ridge present

• Some branch unions have a prominent branch bark ridge

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Collar

No branch bark ridge

Page 31: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Pine union• Collar is visible as a

swelling at the base of the branch

• Branch bark ridge (arrows) is visible as a dark, rough bark region on the top and sides of the union

Page 32: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Wood orientation at union

• Peel the bark from the union

• Note how trunk wood grows out onto the base of the branch (dotted line is edge of trunk wood)

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Desirable branch size

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Page 35: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Weak union

Strong union

Page 36: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

What is good structure?

1. Forest grown vs. open grown tree

2. Codominant stems

3. Good branch attachment

4. Structurally sound tree

Outline of topics

Page 37: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

4. Structurally sound tree

• Scaffold branches spaced vertically.– Rule of thumb: about 5% of tree’s ultimate

height.

• Scaffold branches spaced radially; none directly above another.

• Consistently maintain 60% L.C.R.

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Good structure

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Stems too close together

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Pruning –

Is a solution that will be discussed in another

presentation.

Page 41: Tree structure By Edward F. Gilman Department of Environmental Horticulture University of Florida .

Tree structureTree structure

By Edward F. Gilman

Department of Environmental Horticulture

University of Floridahttp://hort.ufl.edu/woody/planting