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Creating the Urban Forest: The Bare Root Method

"Whether from a nursery field to the city tree lawn or just from one place in your yard to another, it's the roots that suffer when trees are transplanted. Consider this: Shade tree roots are found primarily in the top 12 inches of soil. Tiny absorbing roots, responsible for most of the tree's intake of water and nutrients, are in the top several inches of soil. Roots not only grow horizontally beyond the dripline, there often is a higher percentage of them beyond the dripline than within it. "An unbelievable 90% of tree roots are routinely left behind in the nursery at the time of harvest. The fine absorbing roots that are harvested are easily broken off, damaged and desiccated. Water stress, resulting in part from the tremendous reduction in root mass, is the main reason transplanted trees fail." [Introduction]

Authors
N.L. Bassuk, M. Buckstrup
Date Published
2003
Publisher
Urban Horticulture Institute
Ithaca, NY (US)
Resource Type
Information/Research Summary
Resource Format
Video Recording, Electronic File
Funding Source
University/College, Local (Municipal)
Sub-Topics
Planting
State(s)/Region(s)
New York
Keywords
Planting, Planting, Leaf characteristics, Leaf characteristics
Indexed By
SCUFR&I

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