Titel
Response of Douglas-fir to Infection by Armillaria ostoyae After Thinning or Thinning Plus Fertilization
Verfasser
Erscheinungsjahr
1991
Illustrationen
2 Abb., 7 Tab., zahlr. Lit. Ang.
Material
Unselbständiges Werk
Standardsignatur
6947
Datensatznummer
200062444
Quelle
Abstract
Second-growth stands of Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) were thinned to a 5- x 5-m spacing (TT); additional plots were thinned and fertilized once with 360 kg of N (as urea) per hectare (TF). An unthinned, unfertilized stand (UT) served as control. Ten years after treatment, trees were inoculated with two isolates of Armillaria ostoyae. Trees receiving the TF and TT treatments produced greater diameter growth, leaf area, and wood production per square meter of leaf area per year than did those under the UT treatment. Rates of infection by A. ostoyae were highest in trees that received the TF and lowest in trees that received the TT treatment. Concentrations of sugar, starch, and cellulose in root bark tissue were highest in trees receiving the TF treatment and lowest in trees receiving the TT treatment. Concentrations of lignin, phenolics, and protein- precipitable tannins were highest in root bark from TT trees and lowest in root bark from TF trees. Biochemical parameters of root bark tissue were regressed with incidence of infection; coefficients of determination (r2) ranged from 0.07 (starch) to 0.57 (phenoloc compounds). Ratios of the energetic costs of phenolic and of lignin degradation to the energy available from sugars (Formel) were correlated with incidence of infection (r2 = 0.77 and 0.70, respectively). Thinning combined with fertilization may predispose P. menziesii trees to infection by A. ostoyae by lowering concentrations of defensive compounds in root bark and increasing the energy available to the fungus to degrade them.