Tropical acacias planted in Asia: an overview

Australian acaias are planted in over 70 countries and cover about 2 million ha. This area is dominated by Acacia mearnsii, A saligna and A. mangium. In the past five years there has been a massive increase in the area of A. mangium plantations in Indonesia for pulpwood, and modest increases in Chin...

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Main Authors: Turnbull, J.W., Midgley, S. J., Cossalter, C.
Format: Book Chapter
Language:Inglés
Published: 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/17922
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author Turnbull, J.W.
Midgley, S. J.
Cossalter, C.
author_browse Cossalter, C.
Midgley, S. J.
Turnbull, J.W.
author_facet Turnbull, J.W.
Midgley, S. J.
Cossalter, C.
author_sort Turnbull, J.W.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Australian acaias are planted in over 70 countries and cover about 2 million ha. This area is dominated by Acacia mearnsii, A saligna and A. mangium. In the past five years there has been a massive increase in the area of A. mangium plantations in Indonesia for pulpwood, and modest increases in China, India, Malaysia and Vietnam. The area now totals 600 000 ha. Recent development of plantations of tropical acacias is related to the profitability of growing acacia plantations due to the decreasing availability and higher costs of wood from natural forests, the opportunity to increase productivity of degraded sites, and the suitability of fast-grown wood for paper and reconstituted boards. Furthermore, research in genetics and breeding has identified superior provenances, developed seed orchards, and cloned fast growing hybrids. Molecular biology techniques have enabled rapid characterisation of genotypes and the detection of genetic variation. Nutrition research has demonstrated the value of phosphorus fertilisation on most sites and the benefits of inoculation with selected rhizobia and mycorrhizas. Surveys have identified potentially damaging pathogens and insects. All these have contributed greatly to reducing costs and increasing the potential returns from acacia plantations. There is an increased market acceptance of tropical acacia wood but research on wood properties and development of new products is a priority. As the large area of first-rotation plantations is harvested there is an increasing priority to develop management options to ensure minimal decline in site productivity and plantation yield in successive rotations.
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spelling CGSpace179222025-01-24T14:12:04Z Tropical acacias planted in Asia: an overview Turnbull, J.W. Midgley, S. J. Cossalter, C. acacias planting tropics Australian acaias are planted in over 70 countries and cover about 2 million ha. This area is dominated by Acacia mearnsii, A saligna and A. mangium. In the past five years there has been a massive increase in the area of A. mangium plantations in Indonesia for pulpwood, and modest increases in China, India, Malaysia and Vietnam. The area now totals 600 000 ha. Recent development of plantations of tropical acacias is related to the profitability of growing acacia plantations due to the decreasing availability and higher costs of wood from natural forests, the opportunity to increase productivity of degraded sites, and the suitability of fast-grown wood for paper and reconstituted boards. Furthermore, research in genetics and breeding has identified superior provenances, developed seed orchards, and cloned fast growing hybrids. Molecular biology techniques have enabled rapid characterisation of genotypes and the detection of genetic variation. Nutrition research has demonstrated the value of phosphorus fertilisation on most sites and the benefits of inoculation with selected rhizobia and mycorrhizas. Surveys have identified potentially damaging pathogens and insects. All these have contributed greatly to reducing costs and increasing the potential returns from acacia plantations. There is an increased market acceptance of tropical acacia wood but research on wood properties and development of new products is a priority. As the large area of first-rotation plantations is harvested there is an increasing priority to develop management options to ensure minimal decline in site productivity and plantation yield in successive rotations. 1998 2012-06-04T09:04:45Z 2012-06-04T09:04:45Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/17922 en Turnbull, J.W., Midgley, S. J., Cossalter, C. 1998. Tropical acacias planted in Asia: an overview . ACIAR Proceedings No.82. In: Turnbull, J. W., Crompton, H. R. and Pinyopusarerk, K. (eds.). Recent developments in acacia planting: proceedings of an international workshop held in Hanoi, Vietnam, 27 - 30 October 1997. :14-28.
spellingShingle acacias
planting
tropics
Turnbull, J.W.
Midgley, S. J.
Cossalter, C.
Tropical acacias planted in Asia: an overview
title Tropical acacias planted in Asia: an overview
title_full Tropical acacias planted in Asia: an overview
title_fullStr Tropical acacias planted in Asia: an overview
title_full_unstemmed Tropical acacias planted in Asia: an overview
title_short Tropical acacias planted in Asia: an overview
title_sort tropical acacias planted in asia an overview
topic acacias
planting
tropics
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/17922
work_keys_str_mv AT turnbulljw tropicalacaciasplantedinasiaanoverview
AT midgleysj tropicalacaciasplantedinasiaanoverview
AT cossalterc tropicalacaciasplantedinasiaanoverview