Abstract

Tree crown shape is an important trait affecting the light environment in forest canopies. We examined genetic and environmental effects on outer crown shape of young single-family stands of loblolly pine ( Pinus taeda L.). Crown diameter profiles were measured after canopy closure at four experimental sites in the southeastern US. The two examined families of contrasting aboveground productivity differed in crown length but not in their outer crown shapes or crown shape ratios, defined as the ratio of crown diameter to crown length. Within each site, intensive silvicultural treatment, consisting of fertilization and control of competing vegetation, had little effect upon crown shape. A strongly significant effect of site on crown shape parameters was found in the family grown at all four experimental sites; however, density differences among the experimental series likely accounted for a part of the across-sites variation in crown shape. In contrast to other studies on crown shape in trees, and to findings at age 2 years in the same stands, we conclude that family effects on the outer crown shape were small compared with the environmental effects in these 5-year-old pine plantations, following canopy closure.

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