A History of Transplanting


A brief history of twentieth century transplanting at forest nurseries is presented,including many historical photographs. Transplanting was the normal method of producing plants for reforestation in the first half of the 20th century, and the operation was all done by hand or with rudimentary horse-drawn machinery. Seeds were broadcast sown, the seedlings grown for 1 to 2 years, harvested, and then transplanted at lower growing densities. Starting in the 1940s, mechanical transplanters were converted for use in forest nurseries. During the 1960s, forest nurseries began to switch to seedlings due to the high labor cost of transplanting;cultural improvements allowed production of seedlings with the characteristics of transplants. Precision sowing allowed ideal seedbed density and undercutting produced seedlings with vigorous root systems and thick caliper. In the last 10 to 15 years, however, transplants have returned to favor because of the demand for a large vigorous seedling that can compete with vegetation on outplanting sites and meet the new “Free-to-Grow ” reforestation requirements. A new stock type,the plug +one,was developed by growing a small volume container seedling and transplanting it into a bareroot bed for another year of growth. The 1+1 stock type also gained popularity, and together they comprise up to 90% of the stock types produced in some northwestern US nurseries.
PDF details
Download this file
Publication Forest Nursery Proceedings
Event Olympia, WA - 2002
Section Western Forest and Conservation Nursery Association and the Forest Nursery Association of British Columbia
Author Tom D. Landis and John R. Scholtes
** PDF Files require the Adobe Acrobat Reader.

Search Tree Planters Notes
If you can read this text, it means you are not experiencing the RNGR design at its best. RNGR makes heavy use of CSS, which means it is accessible to any internet browser, but the design needs a standards-compliant browser represent the intended look. Just so you know ;)