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SilvoPasture with Hybrid Poplar and Sheep

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Title: SilvoPasture with Hybrid Poplar and Sheep


1
SilvoPasture with Hybrid Poplar and Sheep
  • GreenWood Resources
  • Columbia Tree Farm
  • Clatskanie, Oregon

2
GreenWood Resources, Inc.
  • Natural resource management company established
    in 1996, based in Portland, Oregon

3
GreenWood Resources, Inc.
  • Currently manage nearly 15,000 acres of hybrid
    poplar plantations

6,000 acres west of theCascade Mountains
8,700 acres east of theCascade Mountains
4
GreenWood Resources, Inc.
  • World-wide development and management of poplar
    plantations
  • Development of elite hybrid poplar and cottonwood
    genotypes

France
N. America
China
Japan
New Zealand
Chile
5
What is Hybrid Poplar?
  • Crosses between Populus species
  • Black cottonwood (P. trichocarpa)
  • Eastern cottonwood (P. deltoides)
  • Japanese poplar (P. maximowiczii)
  • European black poplar (P. nigra)

6
Creating Hybrid Poplars
  • Traditional hybridization through controlled
    pollination, propagation and testing of progeny

7
Uses of Hybrid Poplar
  • Wood products including veneer lumber

8
Uses of Hybrid Poplar
  • Pulping fibers for the paper industry

9
Uses of Hybrid Poplar
  • Feedstock for energy industry co-firing with
    coal and liquid fuels

10
Uses of Hybrid Poplar
  • Land application of municipal effluent
  • Phytoremediation of industrial sites and waste
    water treatment

11
Uses of Hybrid Poplar
  • Carbon sequestration

12
The Columbia Tree Farm (CTF)
  • Established in 1982

13
The Columbia Tree Farm (CTF)
  • 50 owned land, 50 leased

14
The Columbia Tree Farm (CTF)
  • Initially created to support area pulp andpaper
    mills

15
The Columbia Tree Farm (CTF)
  • Operate as agriculture, employing many
    conventional farm practices and equipment

16
Characteristics of the CTF
  • Soils are loams to silty loams with high organic
    matter, low clay content
  • Excellent soil nutrient capacity
  • Moderate temperatures throughout the year
  • Rainfall up to 45 annually, primarily in the
    late fall, winter and spring
  • Plantations were initially planted with 600 to
    900 trees-per-acre for rotations of 6 to 8 years

17
CTF Management Strategy
  • Became independent of paper company in December,
    2000
  • Free to pursue highest value markets for wood
    products
  • Transition to
  • Longer rotations, 12 to 15 years
  • Wider spacing, density of 300 trees per acre
  • Pruning in sequential lifts to produce clear
    lumber
  • Larger piece sizes to maximize board-foot yields

18
Challenges at the CTF
  • Longer period of weed control
  • Four versus two years
  • Mechanical and chemical control
  • Increased cultivation expense
  • Increased potential for damage from voles where
    vegetation creates good habitat

19
Purpose of SilvoPasture Trial
  • Explore the range of plantation ages and stock
    types where sheep grazing could take place
    without injurious effects
  • Demonstrate benefits to plantation management and
    sheep ranching
  • To see if sheep grazing can be an effectivemeans
    of weed control in wider spaced plantations

20
Test Sites
  • 4 year oldtrees, from14 cuttings

21
Test Sites
  • 2 year old trees, from 5 to 6 tall
    whips

22
Test Sites
  • 1 year old trees, from large 6 to 7 tall whips

23
Test Sites
  • Thirty-six-tree plots were established inside and
    outside of each grazing plot for evaluation and
    comparison of tree growth and performance

24
Preparation of Test Plots
  • Sowed cover crop in April, 2004
  • Disked between the tree rows
  • Forage oats at 50 lbs per acre
  • Forage rape at 10 lbs per acre
  • 50 lbs N fertilizer per acre

25
Preparation of Test Plots
  • Oats established well, rape did not establish

26
Preparation of Test Plots
  • Electric fence and water supplies installed in
    late July, 2004

27
Introduction of Sheep
  • Sheep placed on August 2nd, 2004
  • Sheep were 4 to 4½ month old lambs, and weighed
    60 to 65 pounds
  • The number of sheep per plot ranged from 7 to 20
    head, based on quality and quantity of forage
  • Targeted one month of grazing within each plot
  • Mid-month adjustment made in number of head per
    plot, based on how rapidly the forage was being
    consumed and/or trampled

28
Introduction of Sheep
  • Sheep were placed on August 2nd, 2004

29
Introduction of Sheep
  • Sheep were 4 to 4½ month old lambs, and weighed
    60 to 65 pounds

30
Introduction of Sheep
  • The number of sheep per plot ranged from 7 to 20
    head, based on quality and quantity of forage

31
Introduction of Sheep
  • Targeted one month of grazing within each plot

32
Introduction of Sheep
  • Mid-month adjustment in number of head per plot,
    based on how rapidly the forage was being
    consumed and trampled

33
Results from Sheep Grazing
  • Lambs gained 6 to 7 pounds during 29 days grazing
    on the test plots
  • Slightly below average weight gain compared to
    lambs grazing pasture with no supplemental feed
  • Failure of rape reduced the quality of forage
    additional weight gains may have been seen had
    it established
  • Evaluation of the lambs during and at the end of
    the grazing period showed them to be vigorous
    and healthy

34
Results in Age 4 Trees
Tree Age(years) Treatment 2004 DiameterIncrement(inches) 2004 HeightIncrement(feet) Damage
4 Grazed 1.2 11.2 Minor leaf browsing
4 Control 1.1 11.0 Nodamage
35
Results in Age 4 Trees
36
Results in Age 2 Trees
Tree Age(years) Treatment 2004 DiameterIncrement(inches) 2004 HeightIncrement(feet) Damage
2 Grazed 0.8 7.7 Minor leaf browsing
2 Control 0.7 7.5 Nodamage
37
Results in Age 1 Trees
Tree Age(years) Treatment 2004 HeightIncrement(feet) Damage
1 Grazed 0.6 17 showed stem and/or terminal damage
1 Control 0.6 Nodamage
38
Conclusions
  • Minor positive growth impacts with no damage were
    seen in the 2 and 4 year old grazing plots
  • Trees age 2 and older can can be grazed
    successfully
  • Trees that are 1 year old, even if established
    from whips, suffer unacceptable levels of browse
    damage
  • Sheep remained healthy and vigorous, but weight
    gains were not exceptional

39
Observations
  • Careful management of livestock density is
    critical
  • Current grazing lease rates in the lower Columbia
    River area do not justify the expense of sowing a
    cover crop for forage
  • Grazing only native vegetation could prove more
    cost effective and might substitute for one or
    more mechanical cultivations

As a result of this trial, approximately 500
sheep were wintered in several fields of the CTF,
with favorable results reported by two different
ranchers
40
Acknowledgements
  • This study was funded by a grant from Western
    Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education
    (WSARE), under project number FW04-109
  • We wish to acknowledge the contributions of
  • McClellan Mac Stewart, Magruder Farms,
    Clatskanie, Oregon, for technical assistance in
    selecting cover crops and managing livestock
  • GMO Forestry Fund 3, Boston, Massachusetts, for
    their in-kind contribution of the land and tree
    plantations on which the study was conducted
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