MSU scientists cast light on Christmas tree research
Contact: Meg Henderson
STARKVILLE, Miss.鈥擣rom the Griswolds to the Grinch, just about every holiday movie features characters cutting, decorating or stealing the perfect Christmas tree. But most people鈥攊ncluding moviegoers鈥攄on鈥檛 consider that Christmas trees take work to cultivate. Like all trees, they are subject to the threats of disease, insects, fungi and other menaces. This is why scientists in 海角社区鈥檚 Forest and Wildlife Research Center have been studying some of the most popular tree species that decorate homes for the holidays.
Forestry Associate Professor Joshua Granger explained why Christmas trees often get overlooked in forestry programs.
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鈥淐hristmas trees are considered a gray area in the forestry industry. Is it horticulture? Is it landscaping? Or is it forestry?鈥 Granger said. 鈥淲hen I came to MSU, we didn鈥檛 have any research with these trees, but I鈥檝e begun working with the Southern Christmas Tree Association to develop some studies to help our growers out.鈥
Last year, Granger began research on behalf of a partnership established between MSU and Shady Pond Tree Farm in St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana. Former owner Clark Gernon had discovered a novel variety of Leyland cypress, a popular, fast-growing species, on his farm. The single tree was unique in its apparent resistance to Passalora sequoia鈥a fast-spreading foliar pathogen attacking his other trees.
鈥淭his pathogen attacks the foliage either top-down, bottom-up or inside-out until it all turns brown and dies,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ecause the American market likes a cone-shaped, dense tree, farmers have to shear the trees so they grow denser, and that actually helps the pathogen do more damage.鈥
With his colleague, Assistant Professor Ashley Schulz, and forestry undergraduates, Granger has been rooting plant material from the christened Leighton Green Gernon trees in the department鈥檚 greenhouse facility. The trees will be established in the greenhouse for a year and then transplanted outdoors, where they will be grown and propagated for their lifetime.
鈥淚t was Mr. Gernon鈥檚 dream to have researchers study the tree, trial it and qualify it as a unique cultivar, or species. He passed away last Christmas Eve, but we are carrying out his wish through our work on campus,鈥 he said.
In a separate project, Granger is exploring other species for their potential as Christmas trees.
鈥淟eyland cypress trees are planted across Mississippi and much of the South as an ornamental, in addition to their cultivation for Christmas tree farms,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he Leighton Green Gernon trees grow well, but their needles have a white-blue tone, which might be a more niche market. Most people want a dark-green tree.鈥
The first part of this long-term project is to put the trees through the same process commercial growers are using: establishing the trees in a nursery setting, where they can be grown to about 6 feet in height and sheared and sculpted into the desirable cone shape. Species in the study include spruce pine, Atlantic white cedar, Arizona cypress and Leyland cypress hybrids. Once the trees are grown, Granger and his team will gauge consumer preference for the different species and conduct in-home tests to see how they fare indoors for a month or more.
Granger also is beginning a new collaboration with Joby Czarnecki, an associate research professor in MSU鈥檚 Department of Plant and Soil Sciences and the Geosystems Research Institute, deploying scanning technology into Leyland cypress stands to identify early stages of Passalora sequoia.
鈥淩ight now, growers are using a standard spraying protocol, regardless of whether the tree needs it or not,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f we can identify the extent of the damage, we can provide better guidelines that will save growers time and money.鈥
At MSU鈥檚 Hiram D. Palmertree North Mississippi Research and Extension Center in Verona, scientists have just completed a three-year tree study requested by the SCTA and supported by a specialty crop block grant from the Mississippi Department of Agriculture and Commerce. Jeff Wilson, an associate professor of ornamental horticulture with the MSU Extension Service, investigated different nitrogen rate applications to three tree species commonly grown on Southern Christmas tree farms.
鈥淏efore Dr. Granger and I started this work, there had not been any research on Christmas trees in Mississippi since the late 鈥70s or early 鈥80s, but there is a real need for the research today,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e have growers who have sold Christmas trees for 50 years, and although the farming population is aging, we鈥檙e also seeing younger people start up new farms as a side business, selling trees and branching out into agritourism.鈥
The work will end this winter as Wilson and his crew harvest and sell the trees, but he hopes more research will follow.
鈥淭his was just one small nitrogen study, but there鈥檚 a long list of different studies we could do that would benefit growers across the state, helping them manage their trees more efficiently and increase their profits,鈥 he said.
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