Silviculture refers to the art and science of controlling the establishment, growth, composition, health, and quality of forests and woodlands to meet diverse needs. For bamboo, this means managing clumps for sustainable yield.
Once the plantation is established (after 3-5 years), management focuses on maintaining clump health and productivity.
Harvesting is the process of cutting and extracting mature culms. The goal is to get a sustainable yield without damaging the long-term health of the rhizome system.
| Pest | Damage | Management | 
|---|---|---|
| Bamboo Borers (Dinoderus spp.) | Called "powder-post beetles." These are the most serious pests of harvested bamboo. Larvae bore into cut, dry culms, turning the interior into a fine powder (frass). | 
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| Shoot Borers (Ostrinia spp.) | Larvae bore into new, tender bamboo shoots, causing them to die back. | 
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| Aphids & Mealybugs | Sucking insects that feed on sap from leaves and young stems, causing wilting and sooty mold. | 
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| Termites | Attack dead wood and can damage clumps, especially in dry areas. | 
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| Disease | Symptoms | Management | 
|---|---|---|
| Bamboo Blight | A serious disease affecting young culms (1-2 years old). Causes culms to rot at the nodes, turn black, and die. Common in Bambusa bambos. | 
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| Witches' Broom | A fungal or viral disease causing a dense, bushy, "broom-like" mass of branches to grow from a node. It weakens the plant. | 
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| Rotting of Shoots | New, emerging shoots turn soft, rot, and die. Caused by fungal infection (e.g., Fusarium) in warm, wet conditions. | 
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