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Articles

A root drench in unsaturated hydrogel solution reduced stress in transplanted Eucalyptus pilularis cuttings but was ineffective for seedlings: a glasshouse experiment

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Pages 133-140 | Received 20 Sep 2010, Published online: 15 Apr 2013
 

Summary

Available soil moisture and quality of planting material are two important criteria affecting survival during plantation establishment. It has been observed that in northern NSW most seedling deaths occur within the first four weeks of planting. Reducing the rate that plants become stressed is important as less-stressed plants are more capable of exploiting available soil moisture required for survival beyond this four-week period. The health (leaf gas exchange, visual symptoms of leaf and stem wilt) and survival of Eucalyptus pilularis Smith seedlings and cuttings were examined following the application of water in the form of either a hydrogel solution or as irrigation. The main findings were that the rate at which stress developed was slower for cuttings than for seedlings; and that supplying more water, either as hydrogel or irrigation, reduced transplant stress and prolonged survival. Differences in morphology between seedlings and cuttings may explain why cuttings developed stress more slowly than did seedlings. Compared with seedlings, cuttings had reduced leaf area, an increased root: shoot ratio and lower leaf area: root dry mass ratio, all of which are traits that enhance water uptake and reduce water loss. The most effective treatments for reducing stress of seedlings and cuttings were either removing individual seedlings or cuttings from nursery trays and dipping the root ball into a 100% saturated hydrogel solution which coated it with a layer of saturated hydrogel, or supplying the equivalent volume of water as irrigation when transplanting the plants. Drenching nursery trays in 25% and 50% unsaturated hydrogel solutions prior to the removal of the plants delayed stress of transplanted cuttings to a similar extent as the 100% saturated hydrogel solution, but these solutions were ineffective in delaying stress in seedlings. It is thought the more open structure of the soil medium used for cuttings allowed the unsaturated hydrogel solutions to enter the root-ball during root drenching, and because the hydrogel solutions are more viscous than water the drainage of the solutions after removing the nursery trays from the root drench was reduced.

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