Testing a silvicultural recommendation: Brazil nut responses 10 years after liana cutting.

Although liana cutting benefi ts for tropical timber management have been documented, benefi ts for non-timber forest product (NTFP) management have not. We tested the silvicultural recommendation that lianas should be cut from Brazil nut trees (Bertholletia excelsa) to improve host tree fecundity and thus, commercial nut yields. Our 10-year experiment was conducted where local harvesters collect Brazil nuts as part of their forest-based livelihoods. We cut 454 lianas from 78 of 138 host trees ≥50 cm DBH. Treated trees were better producers 3.5 years after liana cutting, and by years 9 and 10 produced three times more fruits than untreated trees. Number of lianas rooted within 5 m of the host tree explained production levels, suggesting both above- and belowground liana competition. Once host crowns were liana free, branch regrowth was highly visible, and crown reassessments suggested that liana cutting improved crown form. Liana cutting may induce non-producing trees to become producers and may circumvent mortality of heavily infested trees. Only lianas associated with Brazil nut trees should be cut to conserve liana ecosystem functions. Liana cutting could be applied to other tropical trees to boost NTFP fruit and seed production and increase host tree fecundity.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: KAINER, K. A., WADT, L. H. de O., STAUDHAMMER, C. L.
Other Authors: Karen A. Kainer, University of Florida; LUCIA HELENA DE OLIVEIRA WADT, CPAF-AC; Christina L. Staudhammer, University of Alabama.
Format: Resumo em anais e proceedings biblioteca
Language:Ingles
English
Published: 2014-12-01
Subjects:Manejo florestal, Castanha do brasil, Ciencias forestales, Cortar, Crecimiento de planta, Madera tropical, Nuez del Brasil, Silvicultura, Castanha do pará, Bertholletia excelsa, Essência florestal, Erva daninha, Corte, Competição biológica, Fator de crescimento, Parasitismo, Forestry, Brazil nuts, Tropical wood, Parasitism, Lianas, Cutting, Plant growth,
Online Access:http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1001180
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spelling dig-alice-doc-10011802023-11-01T10:30:54Z Testing a silvicultural recommendation: Brazil nut responses 10 years after liana cutting. KAINER, K. A. WADT, L. H. de O. STAUDHAMMER, C. L. Karen A. Kainer, University of Florida; LUCIA HELENA DE OLIVEIRA WADT, CPAF-AC; Christina L. Staudhammer, University of Alabama. Manejo florestal Castanha do brasil Ciencias forestales Cortar Crecimiento de planta Madera tropical Nuez del Brasil Silvicultura Castanha do pará Bertholletia excelsa Essência florestal Erva daninha Corte Competição biológica Fator de crescimento Parasitismo Forestry Brazil nuts Tropical wood Parasitism Lianas Cutting Plant growth Although liana cutting benefi ts for tropical timber management have been documented, benefi ts for non-timber forest product (NTFP) management have not. We tested the silvicultural recommendation that lianas should be cut from Brazil nut trees (Bertholletia excelsa) to improve host tree fecundity and thus, commercial nut yields. Our 10-year experiment was conducted where local harvesters collect Brazil nuts as part of their forest-based livelihoods. We cut 454 lianas from 78 of 138 host trees ≥50 cm DBH. Treated trees were better producers 3.5 years after liana cutting, and by years 9 and 10 produced three times more fruits than untreated trees. Number of lianas rooted within 5 m of the host tree explained production levels, suggesting both above- and belowground liana competition. Once host crowns were liana free, branch regrowth was highly visible, and crown reassessments suggested that liana cutting improved crown form. Liana cutting may induce non-producing trees to become producers and may circumvent mortality of heavily infested trees. Only lianas associated with Brazil nut trees should be cut to conserve liana ecosystem functions. Liana cutting could be applied to other tropical trees to boost NTFP fruit and seed production and increase host tree fecundity. Editado por: John A. Parrota; Cynthia F. Moser; Amy J. Scherzer; Nancy E. Koerth; Daryl R. Lederle. 2023-11-01T10:30:54Z 2023-11-01T10:30:54Z 2014-12-01 2014 Resumo em anais e proceedings In: IUFRO WORLD CONGRESS, 24., 2014, Salt Lake. Sustaining forests, sustaining people: the role of research. Abstracts... Salt Lake: IUFRO, 2014. 1465-5498 (impresso) / 2053-7778 (online). http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1001180 Ingles en (The International Forestry Review, v. 16, n. 5). openAccess p. 139.
institution EMBRAPA
collection DSpace
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-alice
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Sistema de bibliotecas de EMBRAPA
language Ingles
English
topic Manejo florestal
Castanha do brasil
Ciencias forestales
Cortar
Crecimiento de planta
Madera tropical
Nuez del Brasil
Silvicultura
Castanha do pará
Bertholletia excelsa
Essência florestal
Erva daninha
Corte
Competição biológica
Fator de crescimento
Parasitismo
Forestry
Brazil nuts
Tropical wood
Parasitism
Lianas
Cutting
Plant growth
Manejo florestal
Castanha do brasil
Ciencias forestales
Cortar
Crecimiento de planta
Madera tropical
Nuez del Brasil
Silvicultura
Castanha do pará
Bertholletia excelsa
Essência florestal
Erva daninha
Corte
Competição biológica
Fator de crescimento
Parasitismo
Forestry
Brazil nuts
Tropical wood
Parasitism
Lianas
Cutting
Plant growth
spellingShingle Manejo florestal
Castanha do brasil
Ciencias forestales
Cortar
Crecimiento de planta
Madera tropical
Nuez del Brasil
Silvicultura
Castanha do pará
Bertholletia excelsa
Essência florestal
Erva daninha
Corte
Competição biológica
Fator de crescimento
Parasitismo
Forestry
Brazil nuts
Tropical wood
Parasitism
Lianas
Cutting
Plant growth
Manejo florestal
Castanha do brasil
Ciencias forestales
Cortar
Crecimiento de planta
Madera tropical
Nuez del Brasil
Silvicultura
Castanha do pará
Bertholletia excelsa
Essência florestal
Erva daninha
Corte
Competição biológica
Fator de crescimento
Parasitismo
Forestry
Brazil nuts
Tropical wood
Parasitism
Lianas
Cutting
Plant growth
KAINER, K. A.
WADT, L. H. de O.
STAUDHAMMER, C. L.
Testing a silvicultural recommendation: Brazil nut responses 10 years after liana cutting.
description Although liana cutting benefi ts for tropical timber management have been documented, benefi ts for non-timber forest product (NTFP) management have not. We tested the silvicultural recommendation that lianas should be cut from Brazil nut trees (Bertholletia excelsa) to improve host tree fecundity and thus, commercial nut yields. Our 10-year experiment was conducted where local harvesters collect Brazil nuts as part of their forest-based livelihoods. We cut 454 lianas from 78 of 138 host trees ≥50 cm DBH. Treated trees were better producers 3.5 years after liana cutting, and by years 9 and 10 produced three times more fruits than untreated trees. Number of lianas rooted within 5 m of the host tree explained production levels, suggesting both above- and belowground liana competition. Once host crowns were liana free, branch regrowth was highly visible, and crown reassessments suggested that liana cutting improved crown form. Liana cutting may induce non-producing trees to become producers and may circumvent mortality of heavily infested trees. Only lianas associated with Brazil nut trees should be cut to conserve liana ecosystem functions. Liana cutting could be applied to other tropical trees to boost NTFP fruit and seed production and increase host tree fecundity.
author2 Karen A. Kainer, University of Florida; LUCIA HELENA DE OLIVEIRA WADT, CPAF-AC; Christina L. Staudhammer, University of Alabama.
author_facet Karen A. Kainer, University of Florida; LUCIA HELENA DE OLIVEIRA WADT, CPAF-AC; Christina L. Staudhammer, University of Alabama.
KAINER, K. A.
WADT, L. H. de O.
STAUDHAMMER, C. L.
format Resumo em anais e proceedings
topic_facet Manejo florestal
Castanha do brasil
Ciencias forestales
Cortar
Crecimiento de planta
Madera tropical
Nuez del Brasil
Silvicultura
Castanha do pará
Bertholletia excelsa
Essência florestal
Erva daninha
Corte
Competição biológica
Fator de crescimento
Parasitismo
Forestry
Brazil nuts
Tropical wood
Parasitism
Lianas
Cutting
Plant growth
author KAINER, K. A.
WADT, L. H. de O.
STAUDHAMMER, C. L.
author_sort KAINER, K. A.
title Testing a silvicultural recommendation: Brazil nut responses 10 years after liana cutting.
title_short Testing a silvicultural recommendation: Brazil nut responses 10 years after liana cutting.
title_full Testing a silvicultural recommendation: Brazil nut responses 10 years after liana cutting.
title_fullStr Testing a silvicultural recommendation: Brazil nut responses 10 years after liana cutting.
title_full_unstemmed Testing a silvicultural recommendation: Brazil nut responses 10 years after liana cutting.
title_sort testing a silvicultural recommendation: brazil nut responses 10 years after liana cutting.
publishDate 2014-12-01
url http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1001180
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