VEGETATIVE PROPAGATION OF POPULUS SPP.: I. INFLUENCE OF TEMPERATURE ON FORMATION AND INITIAL GROWTH OF ASPEN SUCKERS
- 1 September 1966
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Botany
- Vol. 44 (9) , 1183-1189
- https://doi.org/10.1139/b66-130
Abstract
Populus tremuloides Michx. (trembling aspen), a commercially valuable tree, generally reproduces vegetatively by shoots (suckers) that arise adventitiously on lateral roots. Among various ecological factors, temperature plays a significant role in sucker initiation. The influence of five temperature regimes on suckering is reported here. Root cuttings of aspen, 10 cm long and 1.2 to 2.5 cm thick, were grown in the dark in fine sand. The temperature of the sand was kept at 58°, 64°, 74°, 87°, and 95 °F, and the moisture content near field capacity. The earliest emergence of suckers was at 87°. The maximum incidence and growth of suckers was at 74°, declining gradually below and above this temperature. Sufficient food material is stored in short root sections to sustain suckers for more than 3 weeks. These data agree with our field observations and indicate that after such disturbances as cutting and burning, insolation-induced increase in soil temperature is the cardinal factor for sucker stimulation.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of Light Intensity on Growth of Populus tremuloides Cuttings Under Two Temperature RegimesEcology, 1963
- Forest-Prairie Transition West of Itasca Park, MinnesotaBulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 1960
- Aspen Invasion of PrairieBulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 1959
- Biotic Communities of the Aspen Parkland of Central CanadaEcology, 1930