Estimating volume gains in genetically improved stands at rotation age is challenging because first-generation progeny tests in Douglas-fir were typically established to measure the relative growth performance of individual trees from open-pollinated parent trees. The overall goal of this dissertation research was to improve growth simulation of genetically improved Douglas-fir...
Relationships between soil-water stress and plant-moisture
stress were studied with respect to soil classification and cambial
activity in Douglas-fir.
The study sites were forested with Douglas-fir and located in
McDonald Forest and near Marys Peak in the Oregon Coast Range.
Soil-water depletion was followed by the use of gypsum blocks...
The dynamics of stands in the mid-elevation old-growth
Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) forests of the central western
Oregon Cascade Range were investigated using stand structure
analysis. Trees with different growth rates were commonly present
in the same stand, which resulted often in a weak correlation
between tree diameter and age. Thus,...
A three-year investigation was conducted during 1980-1982 to
evaluate the potential of using herded sheep as a silvicultural tool
to suppress brush in Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) plantations
of Oregon's Coast Range. Sheep browsing of Douglas-fir was highest
in May soon after bud break. Averaged over the 2 years of grazing,...
Experiments were conducted to determine if the plagiotropic
growth habit of rooted cuttings of Douglas-fir might result from a
system favoring the accumulation of indoleacetic acid in the adaxial
side of the shoot in response to vertical placement.
Actively growing excised branch terminals were subjected to
gravitational disorientation to determine...
The relation of bud and cambial activity to root initiation and
elongation in Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco)
stem cuttings was studied through two successive growth cycles.
Stem cuttings of current season's growth were taken periodically
from field-grown Douglas-fir trees to determine: (1) origin and
development of root initials; and...
The objectives of this research were to isolate and
determine the molecular structures of certain polyphenols
in Douglas-fir and red alder barks. The compounds of
interest in Douglas-fir were the lignans which are
eventually incorporated into the outer bark phlobaphenes.
Phlobaphenes are the red colored, alcohol soluble, water
insoluble phenolic...
The use of the waterborne wood preservative, ammoniacal copper zinc
arsenate (ACZA), is likely to increase in the near future because of environmental
concerns associated with oilborne preservatives. Developing an understanding of the
permanence of this preservative in wood will become important from both
environmental and performance standpoints. Conventional thinking...
Chemical stains that develop on commercial woods are
problems of great economic importance. The polyphenol
oxidases catalyze the oxidation of the phenolics that
naturally exist in plants to quinones when the cell structure is disrupted. The quinones produced are further
oxidized and polymerized to melanin, the pigment which is
responsible...
Ninety-one species of birds were surveyed in grass/forb, early and late shrub/sapling, pole, and medium sawtimber stages of young-growth Douglas-fir in northwestern California; patterns of bird distribution and abundance were related to habitat conditions and even-age silvicultural treatments. Seven species (band-tailed pigeon, western wood pewee, dusky flycatcher, western bluebird, fox...
Because Douglas-fir [Pseudotsuga menziesii(Mirb.)Franco] bark is a raw material produced in our renewable forests along with wood, an understanding of the ultrastructure of bark cells is of paramount importance if wood technologists are to utilize the bark to the fullest potential. The objectives of this study were to develop microscopic...
Quantitative and qualitative information on the retention of chlorinated residues in chloropicrin treated wood is lacking. Retention of chloropicrin and its chemical breakdown products in wood, and the effects of chloropicrin treatment of wood on invading decay fungi are explored in this thesis. Chlorinated residues in amounts up to 1.5%...
The objectives of this study were to 1) characterize the layering in the wall of the Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga. menziesii (Mirb. ) Franco) phellem cell, 2) determine the pitting present in this cell wall and 3) determine what compounds are present in the middle lamella of this cell. To accomplish the...
Understory conifer regeneration needs to occur beneath conifer-dominated
canopies if two-storied or uneven-aged structures are to be considered for western
Oregon Coast Range stand management. To ensure adequate numbers of seedlings
to meet stocking or habitat structure objectives, planting may be a solution. We
undertook a multi-level study to determine...
There has been an increased interest in the
quantification of pattern in ecological systems over the past
years. This interest is motivated by the desire to construct
valid models which extend across many scales. Spatial methods
must quantify pattern, discriminate types of pattern, and
relate hierarchical phenomena across scales. Wavelet...
To determine whether shading increases drought-induced
root mortality by changing the chemical
composition of roots, I conducted an experiment in which
high and low light treatments in combination with high
and low soil moisture treatments were applied to
seedlings of Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuqa menziesii Mirb.
Franco). Because synthesis of suberin (a...
Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii Mirb. Franco)
seedlings at a nursery in western Oregon were fertilized
with nitrogen in October. Free amino acid (FAA) and total
nitrogen concentrations in needles, stems and fine roots
were followed from before fertilization until just prior
to budbreak the following spring. Before budbreak in
mid-March, the...
The role of moisture stress in seedling physiology and establishment
was studied in both the field environment and laboratory
experiments. Plant moisture stress was measured using the pressure
chamber technique. This technique was modified and tested using a
fascicle of pine needles as a sample, an improvement which allows the...
Existing forest site maps have been described as "invaluable
tools" in forest management. Their, economic value potentially materializes
as the summed advantage from better decisions in all phases of
forestry.
Via Bayesian decision analysis, this study establishes optimal
use and economic value of site information for one facet of management...
An understanding of the dynamics of individual tree and stand
growth, development, and structural patterns during the immature
formative years of a commercial species is essential to determine
correct thinning practices necessary to attain desired objectives.
This study compared a natural, medium-site Douglas-fir stand
and an adjacent similar stand released...
Douglas-fir bark was extracted with n-hexane. A light-colored
"wax-like" solid was recovered from the extract by evaporation of
the solvent. Chemically intact sterol esters and ferulic acid esters
were isolated from the "wax" without saponification or degradation
as had been necessary in former investigations. The characterization
of the intact esters...
Foresters in the Pacific Northwest are directing increasing effort into the management of young-growth forests. These foresters find themselves in a transition period in which they are beginning to develop the framework for managing young-growth forests while they continue to manage substantial reserves of old-growth timber. In this transition period,...
Commercially collected Douglas-fir seed from a moist coastal
ecotype (LaPush, Washington) and a dry inland ecotype (Kaibab
National Forest, Arizona) were subjected to osmotic stresses ranging
from 0 to -8 atmospheres using Carbowax polyethylene glycol 6000
during imbibition and germination. To determine the effect of osmotic
stress on the initiation...
Profitable, even-aged forest management depends on the early establishment
and rapid growth of each new forest crop. These, in turn,
require that the young trees have access to an adequate supply of
native resources of moisture, nutrients and light. In Mediterranean-type
climates, competition for soil moisture is the most serious...
Overall wood density is a complex trait resulting from the interaction of three components: average earlywood density, average latewood density, and latewood proportion. In order to better understand the genetic control of wood density in juvenile Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco), and to assess the utility of
information on its...
A systematic investigation was made of the distribution of short wave radiation within the crown of an open-grown Douglas-fir tree. The study tree was 23 years old, 14 meters tall and had a maximum crown diameter of about ten meters. Global radiation was measured every 15 cm along eight different...
This thesis is divided into three chapters. For all chapters, the experiments described deal with the responses of all or a subset
of 72 wind-pollinated Douglas-fir families from 36 different locations in southwestern Oregon. Wind-pollinated seed was collected from each of two trees at each of the 36 locations. The...
Methanolic extracts of the dormant Douglas-fir shoots (buds, leaves, and stems) were fractionated by solvent partitioning (sodium bicarbonate-diethyl ether). The acidic portion of the extract was subjected to column (Sephadex LH-2O, Silica Gel and Polyvinylpyrrolidone), preparative thick-layer and gas-liquid chromatography.
Fractions collected from chromatographic separations were collected and tested for...
From a preliminary 1969 foliar analysis, eight provenances were chosen from the sixteen included in a region-wide, reciprocal Doulgas-fir provenance study for further study of variation in foliar nutrition. In the fall of 1969 separate foliar samples were collected from ten
trees per provenance at each of ten plantations ranging...
This thesis explored the relationships between the growth of Douglas-fir seedlings and light and moisture resource availability as influenced by competitor type and density in the Oregon Coast Range. Twelve 360 m2 Nelder plots, encompassing a range of 300 to 15,000 cm2 per plant in 48 spokes, were established in...
Vegetative propagation is most effective when individuals of demonstrated superior characteristic can be propagated. For this
reason, a method for the induction of adventitious buds on cultured Douglas-fir shoot tips from 20-25 year old trees was developed. Douglas-fir shoot tips failed to survive and grow on a full strength Murashige...
In 1957 three Douglas-fir stands (15-, 25-, and 40-year-old age classes) were selected on a tree farm in the Cascade foothills of
northwestern Oregon to study factors affecting site productivity. Soil-moisture, soil-temperature and seasonal radial- growth pattern measurements were made with a Colman moisture meter and a dial gauge dendrometer...
When trees from 16 populations of Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco. var. menziesii) were grown at ten geographically diverse locations for seven years, those from a Vancouver Island source were among the top three for height growth on nine of the ten plantations (Rowe and Ching, 1974). In contrast, growth...
A sample of 181 wind pollinated families, representative of the range of environmental conditions occupied by Douglas-fir in northern California, was used as a basis for studying variation in early height growth, phonology, and seed characteristics. Seedlings were raised at Corvallis, Oregon, in a nursery trial designed to evaluate response...
The physiological and biochemical responses of Douglas-fir seeds to stratification, redrying, storage and subsequent germination were determined. Stratification increased seed vigor, embryo and gametophyte
phosphorylative efficiency and RNA synthetic ability. Redrying seems to increase the rate of enthryonic nucleic acid synthesis, speed of germination and seedling vigor. ATP, total adenosine...
Douglas-fir seedlings of a single seed source were grown in a nursery under three levels of light intensity: 9, 44, and 100 percent of full light. Growth over an entire growing season was monitored in terms of proportionate distribution of dry matter to shoot and root systems. This was replicated...
The rate and manner of bioniass loss from decomposing Douglas-fir and western hemlock boles in mid-elevation forests of the central Cascade Range were measured. Bole bark and wood were considered separately. Loss of bole wood due to respiration was measured by change in bole wood density. Loss of bole wood...
The relationships among total water potential (psi), osmotic potential ([pi]), pressure potential (P), and relative water content (R*) were determined during four consecutive soil drying cycles for shoots of Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii [Mirb.] Franco) seedlings. In each cycle, seedlings were sampled for pressure-volume determinations as soil water was depleted gradually...
This research dealt with the direct environmental influence of atmospheric vapor pressure on stomates of Pseudotsuga menziesii, Picea engelniannii, and Fragaria X ananassa, and the indirect physiological
control of stomates by abscisic acid in Pseudotsuga menziesii. Two ventilated porometers (diffusion and steady-state) were compared on four broadleaf and five coniferous...
Net photosynthesis was measured for photosynthetic light efficiency and capacity on two-year-old plants from eight different seed sources in three measurement periods. The measurement periods corresponded to the physiological periods 1) prior to bud swelling, 2) after needle elongation, and 3) predormancy. Measurement period differences in both photosynthetic efficiency and...
Nine species of ectomycorrhizal fungi were grown in liquid media over a pH range of 2-7. Species fell into five major groups: (1)
growth significantly best only at the optimal pH, (2) growth increased with increase of pH, (3) significantly best growth spans three pH units, (4) spans four pH...
Chapter 1 Growth and Survival of Root-Wrenched Douglas-fir Seedlings Root wrenching of seedlings (severing the roots 15 cm below the soil surface) was investigated as a nursery practice to improve growth and survival of field-planted Douglas-fir from six local seed sources
in the Pacific Northwest. At lifting, shoots of wrenched...
Genetic variability in natural populations of Douglas-fir was
studied at molecular level by investigating the variations of some
primary gene products, i. e. enzymes. Using the techniques of disc
gel electrophoresis and biochemical staining, the isoenzyme patterns
of leucine aminopeptidase, esterase and glutamate oxaloacetate
transaminase are characterized in young seedlings...
This study was undertaken to determine the
effects of different chilling treatments during the dormant
season upon growth of Douglas-fir seedlings0 In
addition it was planned to determine whether seedlings
native to various geographic areas differ in their chilling
requirements0
The hypotheses were advanced, based on previous
studies, that chilling...
The objective of this study was to assess the effects of
forest management intensity on long-term productivity of Pacific
Northwest Douglas-fir forests. The components of management intensity
included rotation length, timber utilization standard (whole
tree or bole only), method of slash treatment (remove/burn or leave)
and fertilization practice (urea nitrogen...
Cell aggregate size in both Douglas-fir and poplar suspension cultures was reduced by the addition of the chelator compounds EDTA and CDTA at concentrations under 100 ppm. Reduced cell aggregate size increased growth efficiency of suspension cultures of both species. Cell aggregates 550 j.z. or smaller in size were used...
The main objective of this investigation was to evaluate relationships
between the production and utilization of forage and deer
browsing of hand-planted Douglas-fir seedlings. A secondary purpose
was to study some effects of selected physical and biological
site factors on the survival and growth of fir seedlings.
Field work was...
A mathematical model has been developed to describe the growth
of individual Douglas-fir trees under a variety of stand conditions and
management schedules. The model was developed using empirical
data from open-grown trees and reducing growth capacities of height,
stem, and crown as functions of intertree competition indices. Any
initial...
The relative freezing resistance of tissues in the stem, foliage and buds of terminal twigs from Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco) was investigated at about ten-day intervals from summer until the following spring. Tissues from growing twigs collected before development of dormancy had no freezing resistance and were killed immediately...
Chemical and microbial analyses were made at four seasonal intervals on soil horizons under red alder, conifers, and mixed
alder-conifers at the Cascade Head Experimental Forest, established in 1937 by the U. S. Forest Service near Otis, Oregon.
Microbial analyses showed that although plate counts of molds and bacteria fluctuated...
There are a number of wood properties which affect the quality of forest products such as lumber and pulp. Of these, wood density is considered by some to be the single most important physical characteristic because it is an excellent predictor of strength, stiffness, hardness, and paper-making capacities. Accurately assessing...