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Why seedlings survive: influence of plant attributes
New Forests, 2012Seedling survival and successful forest restoration involves many silvicultural practices. One important aspect of a successful forest restoration program is planting quality seedlings with high survival capability. Thus the nursery needs to create seedlings with plant attributes that allow for the best chance of success once a seedling is field ...
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New Forests, 2012
Field performance can be predicted by evaluating nursery stock quality, but optimal morphological variables for use in these assessments may vary by species especially under dry Mediterranean conditions. Our objective was to identify initial seedling morphological characteristics that successfully predict field performance of five Mediterranean species
Marianthi Tsakaldimi +2 more
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Field performance can be predicted by evaluating nursery stock quality, but optimal morphological variables for use in these assessments may vary by species especially under dry Mediterranean conditions. Our objective was to identify initial seedling morphological characteristics that successfully predict field performance of five Mediterranean species
Marianthi Tsakaldimi +2 more
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Southern Journal of Applied Forestry, 1990
Abstract A seedling survival study for site-prepared loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) plantations, consisting of 43 locations, was established during two planting seasons in 1986-87 in the Georgia Piedmont. Seedlings with top lengths less than 15 cm and with root collar diameters less than 2.5 mm survived significantly worse than larger ...
Barry D. Shiver +3 more
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Abstract A seedling survival study for site-prepared loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) plantations, consisting of 43 locations, was established during two planting seasons in 1986-87 in the Georgia Piedmont. Seedlings with top lengths less than 15 cm and with root collar diameters less than 2.5 mm survived significantly worse than larger ...
Barry D. Shiver +3 more
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Australian Journal of Botany, 2005
Haloxylon ammodendron (C.A. Mey) Bunge (Chenopodiaceae) is a shrub occurring on desert sand dunes in China. Seedling emergence and seedling survival were investigated by sowing seeds at different depths (0, 2.5, 5.0 or 10 mm) in fine or coarse sand in pots irrigated under different regimes. Seed burial in sand was required for seedling establishment of
Kazuo Tobe, Xiaoming Li, Kenji Omasa
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Haloxylon ammodendron (C.A. Mey) Bunge (Chenopodiaceae) is a shrub occurring on desert sand dunes in China. Seedling emergence and seedling survival were investigated by sowing seeds at different depths (0, 2.5, 5.0 or 10 mm) in fine or coarse sand in pots irrigated under different regimes. Seed burial in sand was required for seedling establishment of
Kazuo Tobe, Xiaoming Li, Kenji Omasa
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The germination and seedling survival ofCondalia microphyllaCav. in Argentina
Journal of Arid Environments, 1996The objectives of this work were to determine the basic germination requirements ofCondalia microphylla, one of the dominant woody species in the semi-arid region of central Argentina, in the laboratory and to evaluate seedling emergence and survival under field conditions in 1988 and 1989. The germination of unscarified seeds ofC.
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Early Seedling Survival of Melilotus in Bluegrass Sod
Ecology, 1970Seeds of Melilotus alba and M. officinalis were sown in four different—sized openings in Canada bluegrass, a dominant of an old field. A relationship between seed germination and size of opening in the sod was not apparent but early seedling survival was correlated (P < .01) with size of opening, the larger openings yielding a greater number of ...
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The role of symbioses in seedling establishment and survival
2008Horton, T.R., van der Heijden, M.G.A.
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Germination of Winter Annuals in July and Survival of the Seedlings
Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 1971Jerry M. Baskin, Carol C. Baskin
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Pea and rice seedling survival under anoxia
1982It is not clear whether flood-tolerant plants survive in waterlogged soils because they maintain aerobic activity in all regions of the roots, or whether biochemical adaptations to anoxia are involved. Many plants have some capacity for internal ventilation, and so in order to exclude oxygen from the root environment it is necessary to subject both the
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