article id 209,
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                        Research article
                    
        
                                    
                                    
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                            There have been years in Finland when container seedlings of Norway  spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karsten) planted in the summer have been  damaged by early-autumn frosts. For August and September plantings, the  seedlings can be hardened by means of short-day (SD) treatment, but  little information is available about its usability for earlier  plantings. We studied the effects of early-season SD treatment on the  frost hardiness and risk of a second flush of Norway spruce seedlings.  In three successive years, second-year seedlings were grown in a  greenhouse or outdoors in the spring and early summer and then subjected  to two or three-week SD treatment beginning on the second, third, or  fourth week of June. We monitored the height growth cessation, bud  formation, and frost hardiness of the seedlings in the nursery. All SD  treatments made the height growth cease, but the risk of a second flush  increased if the temperature sum was less than 300 d.d. before the  beginning of the SD treatment or more than 450 d.d. between the end of  the treatment and mid-August. Clearly, then, SD treatment reduced the  risk of a second flush in seedlings that had been grown in a greenhouse  in the spring. Early-season SD treatment increased the frost hardiness  of both needles and stems for late July to early September in comparison  with untreated seedlings. Later in the autumn, however, the differences  disappeared. Before recommending the use of early-season SD-treated  seedlings for summer planting, the method has to be tested in practical  field conditions.
                        
                
                                            - 
                            Luoranen,
                            The Finnish Forest Research Institute, Suonenjoki Research Unit, FI-77600 Suonenjoki, Finland
                                                        E-mail:
                                                            jaana.luoranen@metla.fi
                                                                                        
                                                     
                                            - 
                            Konttinen,
                            The Finnish Forest Research Institute, Suonenjoki Research Unit, FI-77600 Suonenjoki, Finland
                                                        E-mail:
                                                            kk@nn.fi
                                                                                
 
                                            - 
                            Rikala,
                            The Finnish Forest Research Institute, Suonenjoki Research Unit, FI-77600 Suonenjoki, Finland
                                                        E-mail:
                                                            rr@nn.fi