With the
exception of seed germination, there is no more critical period
in the survival of a plant than the days and weeks immediately
following transplantation. This transition can be further
complicated if trees have been improperly cared for while stored
at the construction site. Under ideal conditions trees should be
delivered to the job site the day they are to be installed (Arid
Zone Times, Volume 2 Issue 4).
JOB SITE STORAGE of
boxed trees requires careful and conscientious irrigation.
Appreciate that water enters the roots of plants through root
hairs that are barely as wide as a human hair. They are easily
and irreversibly damaged when soils become dry. Damaged root
hairs do not recover when water is applied so plants must grow
new ones. This regrowth may take more time than some recent
transplants can tolerate.
When the
root mass (tree roots and growing medium) dries out it can
shrink and pull away from the sides of the box. Water applied at
too fast a rate will run down the space between the root mass
and the sides of the box and quickly drain out the bottom of the
box. The person doing the irrigating gets a false sense of
having wet the entire root ball.
When
daytime temperatures consistently exceed 95 degrees, boxed trees
growing in the nursery are irrigated twice a day (daily total
gallons applied 24"box = 2.5 g, 36" box = 5.0 g, 42" = 7.0 g,
48" = 7.5g). Trees should be irrigated a minimum once a day when
stored on site and irrigated slowly at low pressure so that
water can soak in and penetrate the entire root mass. In the hot
late spring and summer months trees left over the weekend
without irrigation WILL BE seriously or possibly
fatally damaged. Root balls should be moist but not saturated
when trees are transplanted.
POST INSTALLATION
IRRIGATION must take into account the soil type and drainage
characteristics, other potential sources of water (lawn
irrigation, rain gutters, general site drainage) and the
differing tolerance of desert tree species to saturated soils.
The goal of irrigation must be to establish a highly dispersed
root system. Roots will not explore either dry or continuously
saturated soils. Deep, regular irrigations encourage a well
distributed root system that can effectively extract water and
essential minerals from the soil, while providing an anchor for
the tree. It may take several weeks or even months before the
roots of transplanted trees explore beyond the original growing
container. During this transition, irrigations schedules be
appropriate to the season and the limited distribution of the
roots. Such a schedule must be sensitive to the potential for
under or over-watering since the soil surrounding the root mass
may become saturated or dry and both conditions serve to impede
the growth of new roots.
The
Desert Botanical Garden has published a recommended irrigation
schedule for trees based on temperature and the size of the
container planted. Install water emitters a sufficient distance
from the base of the trees that roots will grow out and away
from the original rootball. It will also be necessary the
increase the amount of water applied as the trees grows and
matures. This may involve installing additional emitters or
replacing low gallon emitters with higher volume ones.
Ironwood,
Foothill Palo Verde, Mulga (Acacia aneura) and other species
that do not tolerate saturated soils must be irrigated with care
(Arid Zone Times Volume 1, Issue 5). The great challenge is to
provide enough water with out seriously over or under watering
the new transplant. Both extremes are potentially detrimental,
but of the two, over-irrigating is by far the most common
problem. Post installation irrigation schedules can have lasting
positive or negative effects on the long term root development
and ultimately the health of desert landscape trees.