Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/15702
Title: Sequential management of commercial rosewood (Aniba rosaeodora ducke) plantations in central Amazonia: Seeking sustainable models for Essential oil production
Authors: Krainovic, Pedro Medrado
Almeida, Danilo Roberti Alves de
Desconci, Diego
Veiga-Junior, Valdir F.
Sampaio, Paulo de Tarso Barbosa
Keywords: Biomass
Conservation
Essential Oils
Fertilizers
Harvesting
Nutrients
Wood
Aboveground Biomass
Amazon Planted Forest
Endangered Trees
Nutrient Concentrations
Scientific Knowledge
Silvicultural Practices
Species Conservations
Sustainable Management Models
Forestry
Aboveground Biomass
Endangered Species
Essential Oil
Forest Management
Plantation Forestry
Species Conservations
Sustainability
Tree
Cultivation
Dalbergia
Harvesting
Nutrients
Plantations
Volatile Oil
Amazonia
Aniba Rosaeodora
Issue Date: 2017
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Forests
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 8, Número 12
Abstract: Rosewood (Aniba rosaeodora Ducke) is an endangered tree that produces essential oil of high commercial value. However, technical-scientific knowledge about cultivation is scarce and studies are needed to examine the management viability. The current study evaluated rosewood aboveground biomass management, measuring the export of nutrients resulting from harvesting and testing sustainable management models. The crown of 36 rosewood trees were pruned and 108 trees cut at 50 cm above the soil in two regions in Central Amazonia. Post-harvest performance of sprouting shoots was evaluated and after, sprouting shoots were pruned so that the development of two, three and all shoots was permitted. Nutrient stock estimation was calculated as the product of mass and nutrient concentration, which allowed nutritional replacement to be estimated. The pruning facilitates regrowth by 40.11% of the initial mass while by cut regrow 1.45%. Chemical attributes of regrowth biomass differed significantly prior to management and regrowth had a significant correlation with the reserves in root tissues and with the pre -management status of the individual tree. Driving sprouts resulted in significantly larger growth increments and may provide a form of management that can viably be adopted. Biomass sequential management resulted in high nutrient exports and the amount of fertilizer needed for replenishment depended on the intensity and frequency of cropping. Compared with the cut of the tree, pruning the canopy reduces fertilizers that are required to replenish amount by 44%, decreasing to 26.37% in the second rotation. The generated knowledge contributes to this silvicultural practice as it becomes ecologically and economically viable. © 2017 by the authors.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.3390/f8120438
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