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A common garden experiment examining light use efficiency and heat sum to explain growth differences in native and exotic Pinus taeda

TLDR
Examining the hypotheses that growth, light use efficiency, and volume growth per unit heat sum is the same for native and exotic plantations found that Pinus taeda grows faster and has a higher carrying capacity when grown outside its native range.
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This article is published in Forest Ecology and Management.The article was published on 2018-10-01 and is currently open access. It has received 18 citations till now.

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Sentinel-2 Leaf Area Index Estimation for Pine Plantations in the Southeastern United States

TL;DR: Results indicate that Sentinel-2’s improved spatial resolution and temporal revisit interval provide new opportunities for managers to detect within-stand variance and improve accuracy for LAI estimation over current industry standard models.
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Crown architecture, crown leaf area distribution, and individual tree growth efficiency vary across site, genetic entry, and planting density

TL;DR: Why P. taeda can grow much better in Brazil than in the southeastern United States is likely due to a combination of factors, including leaf area distribution, crown architecture, and other factors that have been identified as influencing the site effect.
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Exotic pine forestation shifts carbon accumulation to litter detritus and wood along a broad precipitation gradient in Patagonia, Argentina

TL;DR: In this article, a land-use change in Patagonia, Argentina, that involved the simultaneous planting of a single conifer species (Pinus ponderosa) along a broad precipitation gradient, replacing natural ecosystems from semi-arid steppe to broadleaf forest.
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Longer greenup periods associated with greater wood volume growth in managed pine stands

TL;DR: In this article, a 30 m satellite land surface phenology dataset and stand growth measurements from long-term experimental pine plantation sites in the southeastern United States were used to investigate the question: is stand growth related to remotely sensed phenology metrics? Multiple linear regression and random forest models were fitted to quantify the effect of phenology and silvicultural treatments on stand growth.
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Timber Products Supply and Demand

TL;DR: In this article, private landowners in the South are projected to continuously expand areas of pine plantations in the region far into the future, and an outcome of this is a projected increase in the area of Pine plantations, in the base scenario, by 67 percent.
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Stand development and production dynamics of loblolly pine under a range of cultural treatments in north-central Florida USA

TL;DR: The reduction of soil nutrient limitations through fertilization or control of competing vegetation resulted in dramatic increases in almost every measure of productivity investigated, including height, basal area, biomass accumulation, and leaf area index.
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Estimating hourly incoming solar radiation from limited meteorological data

TL;DR: In this article, a solar radiation prediction tool can be integrated into dormancy, germination, and growth models to improve microclimate-based simulation of development of weeds and other plants.
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Stem growth and respiration in loblolly pine plantations differing in soil resource availability

TL;DR: Stem respiration and growth in 10-year-old loblolly pine plantations were measured monthly during the third year of fertilization and irrigation treatments to determine whether soil resource availability differentially altered growth and respiration in stem tissue.
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Fertilization and irrigation effects on tree level aboveground net primary production, light interception and light use efficiency in a loblolly pine plantation

TL;DR: Overall, large trees grow faster than smaller trees because of greater light capture, whereas the greater response of large trees to treatments resulted more from increased efficiency of using light.
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Q1. What are the contributions in "A common garden experiment examining light use efficiency and heat sum to explain growth differences in native and exotic pinus taeda" ?

Other factors including respiration and extreme climatic conditions may contribute to growth differences per unit degree hour and including these differences in the analysis would require a more detailed modeling effort to examine. The sites used in this study are ideally suited to continue testing additional hypotheses to explain the different growth between native and exotic P. taeda plantations because they have the same genotypes at all sites and consequently eliminate differences in genetics as a potential explanation for observed growth differences.