3.9 Article

Light management in tree nurseries to produce Pithecellobium dulce for the reforestation of degraded lands in Southern Mexico's tropical dry forests

Journal

BOIS ET FORETS DES TROPIQUES
Volume -, Issue 351, Pages 3-13

Publisher

CIRAD-CENTRE COOPERATION INT RECHERCHE AGRONOMIQUE POUR
DOI: 10.19182/bft2022.351.a31919

Keywords

riverbank; seedling quality; ecologial restration feild transplanting pinzon river bank Mexico

Categories

Funding

  1. Colegio de Postgra-duados, Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia (CONACYT)
  2. Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Forestales, Agricolas y Pecuarias (INIFAP)

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Nursery practices are crucial for the production of high-quality seedlings and the survival rates of reforestation plantations in the dry tropics. This study highlights the importance of light management in nurseries, as it affects the morphology, photosynthesis efficiency, and growth of Pithecellobium dulce plants. The study also found that seedling survival in the field is influenced by the light conditions in the nursery, with greater light intensity leading to better survival rates.
The choice of nursery practices is important to the production of high-quality seedlings and to increase the survival rates of reforestation plantations in the dry tropics. However, adequate practices need to be established for native species for which propagation information is scarce. This study suggests that light management in nurseries is a key cultivation practice for future planting success, because of the morpho-physiological changes that plants usually undergo in different light conditions. We examined variations in the morphology, photosynthesis efficiency and growth of Pithecellobium dulce plants produced under four levels of light in nursery conditions (20%, 40%, 60%, and 100% of photosynthetically active radiation [PAR)). We also assessed survival after planting out according to the light conditions under which the plants were grown. Morpho-physiological variables were examined in three-month-old plants. A plantation was established in the field using the nursery-grown plants, and their survival was recorded monthly for 17 months. In the nursery, the light levels had significant effects on morphology, photosynthesis efficiency and growth. The 60% PAR level was favourable to optimum results for most of the variables, whereas the least successful results were found in plants grown at 20% PAR. Seedling survival in the field differed significantly according to the nursery light level, increasing with greater light intensity in the nursery during seedling production. 100% survival was observed in seedlings produced under 100% PAR, whereas the lowest survival rate (53%) was found in seedlings grown under 20% PAR. Light management is thus shown as a key cultivation practice by affecting the quality of P. dulce seedlings, which is improved in the nursery at 60% PAR. However, better survival after planting out is obtained with plants produced under full sun. These results should help to improve nursery management and establishment in the field of P. dulce in projects to restore degraded lands in the dry tropics.

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