会议专题

A METHOD TO EVENLY APPLY FOOT TRAFFIC TO TURF PLOTS

  Foot traffic can cause both wear of turf and compaction of the soil,which are often significant management challenges on a golf course resulting from the playing of the game.Traffic tolerance has been previously examined using a variety of methods including both human foot traffic as well as custom machinery; however,a methodology for producing uniform foot traffic does not exist.The objectives were to: 1) devise a foot traffic methodology that applies a controlled number of footsteps per unit area,2) compare the color and quality of trafficked turfgrass using this methodology to an untrafficked control,and 3) evaluate the traffic methodology effects on soil bulk density.Three people walking in soft-spiked golf shoes were evaluated for stride and foot lengths.This information was used to develop a walking procedure of 16 passess that evenly distributed 76 total footsteps over a 0.25 by 3.7 m traffic lane.These sixteen walking passes produced a foot traffic intensity that was similar to the number of footsteps occurring near the hole of a putting green during approximately 50 rounds of golf.A trial to compare trafficked and non-trafficked plots indicated that the damage from foot traffic applied using this walking procedure was realistic and uniform.This method would be useful to scientists interested in replicating the effects of walking foot traffic on turf.

compaction golf shoe wear

J.A. Roberts J.C. Inguagiato J.A. Murphy

Dept. of Plant Pathology,North Carolina StateUniversity,Raleigh,NC 27695 USA Dept.of Plant Science and Landscape Architecture,University ofConnecticut,Storrs,CT,06269 USA Dept. ofPlant Biology and Pathology,Rutgers,the State University ofNew Jersey,New Brunswick,NJ 08901

国际会议

The 12th International Turfgrass Research Conference(第十二届国际草坪学术大会)

北京

英文

743-746

2013-07-14(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)