Abstract

Tree species that provide early benefits for farmers can serve to increase the adoption of temperate agroforestry practices. Growth of pin (Quercus palustris Muenchh.), swamp white (Quercus bicolor Willd.), and bur oak (Quercus macrocarpa Michx.) saplings was evaluated in an agroforestry practice designed for watershed protection in northern Missouri, USA, to identify species that provide early productive and protective functions. Large, containerized oak seedlings were planted in the center of 4.5-m-wide contour grass-legume strips established at 22.8- to 36.5-m intervals on a 4.44-ha watershed with a corn (Zea mays L.) – soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) rotation. Sapling survival, height, and diameter growth were annually recorded during five growing seasons. Branch and leaf mass were also recorded in the two last measuring years. Preliminary assessment of rooting pattern was made based on the relative abundance of horizontal and vertical main roots. Mean shoot growth rate of pin oak was the highest during the whole study period, while swamp white and bur oak grew at the same rate until the fourth growing season. During the fifth growing season, growth rate of bur oak was the lowest. The root system of pin oak appears to be concentrated close to the tree, thus strengthening the buffer strips and competing least with the crop. The shallow root system of swamp white oak may best scavenge leaching nutrients from subsurface flow, thus reducing nonpoint source pollution. Sapling survival, growth rate, and rooting pattern suggest that pin oak and swamp white oak have a better potential for agroforestry practices in the Midwest than bur oak.

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