4.4 Article

Influence of umbrella pine (Pinus pinea L.) stand type and tree characteristics on cone production

Journal

AGROFORESTRY SYSTEMS
Volume 91, Issue 6, Pages 1019-1030

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10457-016-9975-2

Keywords

Bivariate correlation; Competition index; Principal component analysis; Tree dimension

Funding

  1. PROGRAMA AGRO (Colheita mecanica da pinha (Pinus pinea L.)) [AGRO/200/2001]
  2. FCT - Foundation for Science and Technology [UID/AGR/00115/2013]
  3. FCT, Portugal [UID/MAT/04674/2013]

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Most umbrella pine (Pinus pinea L.) stands are managed as agroforestry systems, whose main production is fruit, due to the edible and highly nutritious kernels, and are frequently associated to natural or seeded pastures and grazing. The stands have low density, in order to enhance crown growth and fruit production. Nevertheless, cone production, both with regard to number and weight, varies greatly between stands, trees and years. In this study were selected three agroforestry systems, representative of umbrella pine stands whose main production is fruit, and one stand representative of the timber production system, where fruit is the secondary production. It was evaluated the variability in cone production as a function of the tree's diameter at breast height and crown diameter and the individual tree's competition status. The results indicate that stands managed in agroforestry systems with lower competition and individuals with larger diameter at breast height and crown diameter tend to produce more and heavier cones per tree. The first two principal components of the principal component analysis explain 84 % of the variance in cone production, trees' dimensions and competition index. Tree competition status has a negative impact on production per tree.

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