Pruning reduces wind damage - a research project

Here is a summary of new research on effects of pruning trees on wind damage. Five trees were pruned by either doing nothing (controls), reducing crown size, raising the crown, or thinning the crown for a total of 20 trees. The same amount of foliage was removed from each tree. The four treatments are described below in photographs showing one tree of each before and during testing. Trees were blown with winds reaching 120mph. Click here for data summary with statistics.
(click here for appropriate pruning to reduce storm damage)

Closeup at 120mph: trunk bending

Lower trunks on trees not pruned moved statistically more than all pruned trees. Upper trunks on raised trees moved the same as non-pruned trees. Average angle of trunk from the vertical on 5 trees in 120mph wind is listed under each photograph.
Pruning treatment
Before testing
During testing
No pruning

 

Lower trunk angle at 120mph = 27
Upper trunk angle at 120mph = 46

Reducing

Crown was reduced in height using a reduction cut.

Lower trunk angle at 120mph = 10
Upper trunk angle at 120mph = 17

Thinning

Crown was thinned by removing primary branches back to trunk.

Lower trunk angle at 120mph = 12
Upper trunk angle at 120mph = 23

Raising

Crown was raised be removing lowest branches.

Lower trunk angle at 120mph = 10
Upper trunk angle at 120mph = 31