Advice

Nursery Techniques

The nursery is a starting point of production of high-quality planting stock, which is essential for the success of all forest restoration projects.

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Mr. Phairote and Mr. Chotgun, members of Ban Mae Sa's community environmental conservation group working at the Ban Mae Sa nursery.

Seedlings of all tree species must be grown to a suitable size, must be robust, growing vigorously and disease-free when the season is optimum for tree planting. This is difficult to achieve when growing a large number of different native tree species, which will fruit at different times and vary greatly in their germination and seedling growth rates. Therefore, nursery techniques are high precedence for seedling production and improved tree propagation methods, leading to the development of detailed production schedules for each species being propagated.

Building a nursery

A nursery must provide the condition for the growth of seedlings and must protect them from stress and extreme climates. It must also be a comfortable and safe place for the nursery staff. The size of the nursery depends on the size of the area to be restored, which in turn determines how many trees must be produced each year. Building a nursery need not be costly. Locally available materials, for example, recycled wood, bamboo, and palm leaves can be used to build a simple nursery. Furthermore, simple inexpensive equipment, such as shovels, trowels, watering cans, secateurs, etc., can generate good quality seedlings.

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Extracting Sapindus rarak seed.

Collecting and handling tree seeds

In tropical forests, different tree species fruit in every month of the year, so at least one seed collection trip is needed every month. Therefore, the nursery needs to know the flowering and fruiting time of each species - phenology studies can provide this information. Phenology studies are finding seed trees in the forest and monitoring from flowering onwards, to judge the best time to collect fruits, which are fully ripe and before dispersed or consumed by animals. However, some species fruit in a few weeks and produce a few seeds, and so waiting to collect seeds of some species may be too late. There is also a faster way to produce tree saplings by collecting wildlings. Wildlings are seedlings that are dug up from the forest and cultivated in a nursery. The seeds and wildlings should be collected from at least 25-50 high-quality parent trees locally to prevent closely genetically related individuals. Before sowing, the seeds should be extracted from the fruits and cleaned, making sure they are high-quality seeds available (no signs of fungal growth, teeth marks from animals, or small holes made by seed-boring insects).

Germinating seeds

In the nursery, dormancy of seeds prolongs tree production time. Therefore, various treatments should be applied to shorten dormancy. For example, a thick seed coat will be broken dormancy by scarification technique (cutting a small piece of seed coat or rubbing seed with sandpaper for small seed). For species with mechanical dormancy, acid treatment is recommended. For chemical inhibited dormancy, complete removing of fruit pulp and repeated soaking are recommended. Seed sowing needs to use a germination tray filled with a suitable medium (good aeration, drainage, and support). Seed trays should be deep enough and have drainage holes in the bottom.

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Seedling potting at the Ban Mae Sa nursery.

Potting

The containers must be large enough for a good root system and support adequate shoot growth. They must have sufficient holes to permit good drainage, and be lightweight, inexpensive, durable, and readily available. Plastic bags are probably commonly used containers. The optimum size is 23 x 6.5 cm., which allows the root to a reasonable length before they reach the bottom of the bags and begin to spiral. The potting medium consists of coarse and fine soil particles with pores between them that allow aeration and drainage, provide growing trees with support, moisture, oxygen, nutrients, and symbiotic micro-organisms. A standard medium should consist of 50% forest topsoil mixed with 25% fine organic matter ad 25% coarse organic matter. Seedlings are ready for picking out when the first 1-3 pairs of true leaves have fully expanded, then transfer seedlings into the containers. The medium within plastic bags should not be compact, but neither should it be too loose. The bags should be up straight, be placed, and water in a shaded area.

Caring for trees in the nursery

Watering seedlings in nurseries depend on the season. During the rainy season, the seedling still alive without water for a few days in open nurseries. By contrast, in the dry season, it may be necessary to water the seedlings twice a day. Fertilizer should be applied to accelerate growth to ensure that the plants are ready for transportation by the planting season. Furthermore, grading is an effective method of quality control. It involves arranging the growing trees to of size, while at the same time removing stunted, root pruning, disease inspection part and shoot pruning. Fast-growing species should not be too large or too cumbersome to handle and easily broken during transportation and planting. However, never prune root and shoots in the month before planting out. About 2 months before planting, gradually reduce the shade and frequency of watering. It would prepare saplings for difficult transitions from environmental in the nursery to the harsh conditions of deforested sites, this technique is called hardening-off.

Production schedules

Different species fruit in different months and have widely different rates of germination and seedling growth, anyway, all species must be ready for planting by the optimal planting time. Species production schedules make this daunting managerial task easier. The production schedule is a concise description of the procedure to produce planting stock of optimum size and quality from seed, wildlings, or cuttings by the optimum planting-out time. It can be represented as an annotated time-line diagram that shows: i) when each operation should be performed, ii) which treatments should be applied to manipulate seed germination and seedling or sapling growth. Species production schedules are an excellent tool to ensure that the species are ready for planting when required.

1: Effects of fertilizer on growth and biomass allocation of three evergreen tree species from seasonally dry tropical forests

Publication date05 Apr 2023
Author(s)Shannon, D.P., P. Tiansawat, S. Dasoon, S. Elliott & W. Pheera
PublisherTrends in Sciences
Format
Journal Paper

ABSTRACT: Tree planting is widely accepted as a strategy to mitigate climate change, with a strong focus on use of native tree species. Various kinds of fertilizer have been recommended, to...

2: Effects of Root Air-Pruning on Framework Tree Species Seedlings Production for Forest Restoration in Northern and Southern Thailand

Publication date2020
Author(s)Chaiklang, P.
PublisherEnvironmental Science, Chiang Mai University
Format
MSc Thesis

Abstract: Tree planting is a simple tool to bring back the forest area. Therefore, seedling production is one of the important steps in forest restoration. Root pruning can promote the root system...

3: Quality and production costs of seedlings grown with different root-pruning techniques

Publication date2019
Author(s)Preeyaphat Chaiklang, Sutthathorn Chairuangsri, Pimonrat Tiansawat
PublisherProceedings of the 5th EnvironmentAsia International Conference
Format
Conference Paper

Abstract: About half of the cost of forest restoration by the framework species method (FSM) is planting stock production costs. Manual root pruning promotes better tree seedlings, but is time...

4: Testing a new type of fertilizer to improve nursery production of framework tree species for forest ecosystem restoration in northern Thailand

Publication date2019
Author(s)Waiboonya, P. & S. Elliott
Publisher CMU J. Nat. Sci. 18(4):411-426
Format
Journal Paper

ABSTRACT: To improve planting-stock production of native forest tree species for tropical forest ecosystem restoration projects in northern Thailand, we compared a new controlled-release...

5: Seed and microsite limitations of large-seeded, zoochorous trees in tropical forest restoration plantations in northern Thailand

Publication date2018
Author(s)Sangsupan, H., D. Hibbs, B. Withrow-Robinson & S. Elliott
PublisherElsevier: Forest Ecology and Management 419-420:91-100
Format
Journal Paper

ABSTRACT: On deforested or degraded land, planting mixtures of native forest tree species facilitates establishment of incoming tree seedling species (i.e. "species recruitment") by rapidly...

6: Selection of native tree species for restoring forest ecosystems

Publication dateJun 2016
Author(s)Shannon, D.P. & S. Elliott
PublisherProceedings of the 3rd National Meeting on Biodiversity Management in Thailand
Format
Conference Paper

ABSTRACT: The framework species method is a well-established tropical forest restoration technique, which involves planting 20-30 indigenous forest trees species, with high survival and growth...

7: The Effects of Fertilizer and Aspirin on Propagation of Ficus Species from Seed

Publication date21 Apr 2016
Author(s)Sansupa, C.
PublisherDepartment of Biology, Faculty of Science Chiang Mai University
Format
BSc Project

ABSTRACT: Ficus spp. (or fig trees) are keystone species in tropical forest and have been promoted as framework species for forest restoration in Northern Thailand. This study aimed to improve...

8: Restoring Tropical Forests: a Practical Guide

Publication date2013
Author(s)Elliott, S.D., D. Blakesley & K. Hardwick
PublisherFirst published in 2013 by Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, TW9 3AB, UK www.kew.org Distributed on behalf of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew in North America by the University of Chicago Press, 1427 East 60th Street, Chicago, IL 60637, USA
Format
Book

Available in English, Spanish and French      The authors at a publishers' meeting, Kew 2012Restoring Tropical Forests is a hands-on guide to restoring degraded tropical forest ecosystems. Based...

9: The use of Asian Ficus species for restoring tropical forest ecosystems.

Publication date2013
Author(s)Kuaraksa, C. and S. Elliott
PublisherRestoration Ecology
Format
Journal Paper

ABSTRACT: Fig (Ficus spp.) trees have been promoted as framework species for tropical forest restoration throughout Asia, because they are considered to be keystone species. This article presents...

10: การฟื้นฟูป่าเสื่อมโทรมในพื้นที่แห้งแล้ง : แนวคิดและแนวทางปฎิบัติเพื่อการฟื้นฟูป่าในภาคตะวันตก

Publication date2011
Author(s)A. Sapanthuphong, S. Thampituk, and A. SukIn
PublisherElephant Conservation Network, Kanchanaburi
Format
Book

รายงานการรวบรวมองค์ความรู้จากโครงการ "การวิจัยเพื่อการฟื้นฟูป่า" ในชุมชนหมู่บ้านแก่งปลากด ที่มีพื้นที่ติดกับเขตรักษาพันธุ์สัตว์ป่าสลักพระ มีการดำงานร่วมกันระหว่าง เครือข่ายอนุรักษ์ช้าง (ECN)...