- Source: Arboriculture
Arboriculture () is the cultivation, management, and study of individual trees, shrubs, vines, and other perennial woody plants. The science of arboriculture studies how these plants grow and respond to cultural practices and to their environment. The practice of arboriculture includes cultural techniques such as selection, planting, training, fertilization, pest and pathogen control, pruning, shaping, and removal.
Overview
A person who practices or studies arboriculture can be termed an arborist or an arboriculturist. A tree surgeon is more typically someone who is trained in the physical maintenance and manipulation of trees and therefore more a part of the arboriculture process rather than an arborist. Risk management, legal issues, and aesthetic considerations have come to play prominent roles in the practice of arboriculture. Businesses often need to hire arboriculturists to complete "tree hazard surveys" and generally manage the trees on-site to fulfill occupational safety and health obligations.
Arboriculture is primarily focused on individual woody plants and trees maintained for permanent landscape and amenity purposes, usually in gardens, parks or other populated settings, by arborists, for the enjoyment, protection, and benefit of people.
Arboricultural matters are also considered to be within the practice of urban forestry yet the clear and separate divisions are not distinct or discreet.
Tree Benefits
Tree benefits are the economic, ecological, social and aesthetic use, function purpose, or services of a tree (or group of trees), in its situational context in the landscape.
= Environmental Benefits
=Erosion control and soil retention
Improved water infiltration and percolation
Protection from exposure: windbreak, shade, impact from hail/rainfall
Air humidification
Modulates environmental conditions in a given microclimate: shields wind, humidifies, provides shade
Carbon sequestration and oxygen production
= Ecological Benefits
=Attracting pollinators
Increased biodiversity
Food for decomposers, consumers, and pollinators
Soil health: organic matter accumulation from leaf litter and root exudates (symbiotic microbes)
Ecological habitat
= Socioeconomic Benefits
=Increases employment: forestry, education, tourism
Run-off and flood control (e.g. bioswales, plantings on slopes)
Aesthetic beauty: parks, gatherings, social events, tourism, senses (fragrance, visual), focal point
Adds character and prestige to the landscape, creating a “natural” feel
Climate control (e.g shade): can reduce energy consumption of buildings
Privacy and protection: from noise, wind
Cultural benefits: eg. memorials for a loved one
Medical benefits: eg. Taxus chemotherapy
Materials: wood for building, paper pulp
Fodder for livestock
Property value: trees can increase by 10-20%
Increases the amount of time customers will spend in a mall, strip mall, shopping district
Tree Defects
A tree defect is any feature, condition, or deformity of a tree that indicates weak structure or instability that could contribute to tree failure.
Common types of tree defects:
Codominant stems: two or more stems that grow upward from a single point of origin and compete with one another.
common with decurrent growth habits
occurs in excurrent trees only after the leader is killed and multiple leaders compete for dominance
Included bark: bark is incorporated in the joint between two limbs, creating a weak attachment
occurs in branch unions with a high attachment angle (i.e. v-shaped unions)
common in many columnar/fastigiate growing deciduous trees
Dead, diseased, or broken branches:
woundwood cannot grow over stubs or dead branches to seal off decay
symptoms/signs of disease: e.g. oozing through the bark, sunken areas in the bark, and bark with abnormal patterns or colours, stunted new growth, discolouration of the foliage
Cracks
longitudinal cracks result from interior decay, bark rips/tears, or torsion from wind load
transverse cracks result from buckled wood, often caused by unnatural loading on branches, such as lion's tailing.
Seams: bark edges meet at a crack or wound
Ribs: bulges, indicating interior cracks
Cavity and hollows: sunken or open areas wherein a tree has suffered injury followed by decay. Further indications include: fungal fruiting structures, insect or animal nests.
Lean: a lean of more than 40% from vertical presents a risk of tree failure
Taper: change in diameter over the length of trunks branches and roots
Epicormic branches (water sprouts in canopy or suckers from root system): often grow in response to major damage or excessive pruning
Roots:
girdling roots compress the trunk, leading to poor trunk taper, and restrict vascular flow
kinked roots provide poor structural support; the kink is a site of potential root failure
circling roots occurs when roots encounter obstructions/limitations such as a small tree well or being grown too long in a nursery pot; these cannot provide adequate structural support and are limited in accessing nutrients and water
healthy soil texture and depth, drainage, water availability, makes for healthy roots
Tree Installation
Proper tree installation ensures the long-term viability of the tree and reduces the risk of tree failure.
Quality nursery stock must be used. There must be no visible damage or sign of disease. Ideally the tree should have good crown structure. A healthy root ball should not have circling roots and new fibrous roots should be present at the soil perimeter. Girdling or circling roots should be pruned out. Excess soil above the root flare should be removed immediately, since it present a risk of disease ingress into the trunk.
Appropriate time of year to plant: generally fall or early spring in temperate regions of the northern hemisphere.
Planting hole: the planting hole should be 3 times the width of the root ball. The hole should be dug deep enough that when the root ball is placed on the substrate, the root flare is 3-5cm above the surrounding soil grade. If soil is left against the trunk, it may lead to bark, cambium and wood decay. Angular sides to the planting hole will encourage roots to grow radially from the trunk, rather than circling the planting hole. In urban settings, soil preparation may include the use of:
Silva cells: suspended pavement over modular cells containing soil for root development
Structural soils: growing medium composed of 80% crushed rock and 20% loam, which supports surface load without it leading to soil compaction
Tree wells: a zone of mulch can be installed around the tree trunk to: limit root zone competition (from turf or weeds), reduce soil compaction, improve soil structure, conserve moisture, and keep lawn equipment at a distance. No more than 5-10cm of mulch should be used to avoid suffocating the roots. Mulch must be kept approximately 20cm from the trunk to avoid burying the root flare. With city trees additional tree well preparation includes:
Tree grates/grill and frames: limit compaction on root zone and mechanical damage to roots and trunk
Root barriers: forces roots to grow down under surface asphalt/concrete/pavers to limit infrastructure damage from roots
Staking: newly planted, immature trees should be staked for one growing season to allow for the root system to establish. Staking for longer than one season should only be considered in situations where the root system has failed to establish sufficient structural support. Guy wires can be used for larger, newly planted trees. Care must be used to avoid stem girdling from the support system ties.
Irrigation: irrigation infrastructure may be installed to ensure a regular water supply throughout the lifetime of the tree. Wicking beds are an underground reservoir from which water is wicked into soil. Watering bags may be temporarily installed around tree stakes to provide water until the root system becomes established. Permeable paving allows for water infiltration in paved urban settings, such as parks and walkways.
UK
Within the United Kingdom trees are considered as a material consideration within the town planning system and may be conserved as amenity landscape features.
The role of the Arborist or Local Government Arboricultural Officer is likely to have a great effect on such matters. Identification of trees of high quality which may have extensive longevity is a key element in the preservation of trees.
Urban and rural trees may benefit from statutory protection under the Town and Country Planning system. Such protection can result in the conservation and improvement of the urban forest as well as rural settlements.
Historically the profession divides into the operational and professional areas. These might be further subdivided into the private and public sectors. The profession is broadly considered as having one trade body known as the Arboricultural Association, although the Institute of Chartered Foresters offers a route for professional recognition and chartered arboriculturist status.
The qualifications associated with the industry range from vocational to Doctorate. Arboriculture is a comparatively young industry.
See also
References
Harris, Richard W. (1983). Arboriculture: Care of Trees, Shrubs, and Vines in the Landscape. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc. pp. 2–3. ISBN 0-13-043935-5.
"arboriculture". Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, Eleventh Edition. Merriam-Webster.
"arboriculture". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2007.
"arboriculture". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Online. Houghton Mifflin Company. 2000.