Genetic parameters for spiral-grain angle in two 19-year-old clonal Norway spruce trials

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Abstract

Spiral grain was measured for all annual rings on wood discs taken at a single sampling height from two 19-year-old (field age) Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) clonal trials. In both trials, the mean grain angle reached a maximum inclination to the left at ring number 4, followed by a monotonic decrease towards a right-handed inclination. Clonal means of mean grain angle of rings 3 to 15 ranged from 0.5 to 4.7 degrees and from -0.2 to 5.3 degrees in the two trials, respectively. The broad-sense heritability of mean grain angle was 0.42 in both trials and the slope of the radial grain-angle development showed heritabilities varying between 0.26 and 0.40. Estimates of genotypic correlations indicated that clones with a high grain angle in the inner rings tended to have a more rapid development towards a straight angle in the following rings. Selection based on any of the rings in the interval from ring numbers 5 to 10 was most efficient in decreasing the average grain spirality at the sampling level considered.

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Hannrup, B., Grabner, M., Karlsson, B., Müller, U., Rosner, S., Wilhelmsson, L., & Wimmer, R. (2002). Genetic parameters for spiral-grain angle in two 19-year-old clonal Norway spruce trials. In Annals of Forest Science (Vol. 59, pp. 551–556). Springer-Verlag France. https://doi.org/10.1051/forest:2002040

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