Publication | Closed Access
Genetic control of bud phenology in pole-size trees and seedlings of coastal Douglas-fir
72
Citations
0
References
1993
Year
BotanyGeneticsSilvicultureTree BreedingBud BurstQuantitative GeneticsPole-size TreesGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsPlant BreedingBiologyGenetic ControlNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyPopulation DevelopmentSeed StorageBud Burst PhenologyMedicineTree GrowthBud PhenologyPlant Physiology
The extent to which bud phenology is genetically controlled and related to growth traits was examined in seedlings and pole-size trees of coastal Douglas-fir (Pseudotsugamenziesii var. menziesii (Mirb.) Franco). Data on bud burst, bud set, and stem growth were collected from pole-size trees of 60 open-pollinated families growing in four plantations, and from seedlings of 45 of these same families growing in three trials. In both age-classes, bud burst was under moderate to strong genetic control (h 2 ≥ 0.44) and family breeding values were stable across test environments, indicating that this trait could be readily altered in breeding programs. Bud set was inherited strongly in pole-size trees (h 2 = 0.81) but weakly in seedlings (h 2 < 0.30). Both bud burst and bud set were positively correlated with growth in seedlings and pole-size trees. Thus, selection for greater growth at either age-class is expected to delay bud burst and bud set. We also evaluated the accuracy of two alternatives for assessing bud burst phenology in pole-size trees compared with the traditional method. We show that bud-burst date on lateral branches can be used to accurately rank both individuals and families for bud-burst date on less accessible leader shoots. In addition, we found that families can be ranked for mean bud-burst date by the proportion of trees per family that have flushed on a given scoring day. This method is only effective, however, when between 25 and 75% of all trees in the test have flushed at the time of scoring.