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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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Journal Article

Ideotype Development in Southern Pines: Rationale and Strategies for Overcoming Scale-Related Obstacles

TL;DR: Advances related to improvements and developments of process modeling, advances in technologies that permit measures of component processes at relevant scales, the likely future importance of intensive clonal forestry, and the movement toward large-scale genetic block plot experiments are converging.
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Stand and tree characteristics and stockability in Pinus taeda plantations in Hawaii and South Carolina

TL;DR: Stand structure and crown architecture of loblolly pine spacing trials in Hawaii and South Carolina were examined and data collected indicate that stockability differences were associated with differences in tree size-class structure, crown length, and leaf area.
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Why is the productivity of Douglas-fir higher in New Zealand than in its native range in the Pacific Northwest, USA?

TL;DR: In this article, meteorological data from plantation sites in New Zealand and Oregon were used to evaluate the role of climate on Douglas-fir plantations in terms of their productivity, including mean monthly temperature extremes and solar irradiance, air humidity deficits, and frost frequency.
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Efeito do espaçamento e da idade sobre variáveis de povoamentos de Pinus Taeda L.

TL;DR: In this article, a study about the influence of the espacamento on the tendency of crescimento of area basal por ha and volume por ha was conducted on patients of Pinus taeda L. nao-desbastados pertencentes a empresa IGARAS.
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Analysis of the sensitivity of absorbed light and incident light profile to various canopy architecture and stand conditions.

TL;DR: Comparing modeled diffuse non-interceptance and photosynthetic photon flux density with measurements at different layers of complex pine-broadleaved canopy with large seasonal variation of leaf area index found accounting for the effect of tree clumping on absorbed light is most important in stands composed of species where leaves are not very clumped.
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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.