- Standardsignatur9716
- TitelRelationships Among Jack Pine Budworm Damage, Selected Tree Characteristics, and Armillaria Root Rot in Jack Pine
- Verfasser
- Erscheinungsjahr1990
- SeitenS. 1791-1795
- Illustrationen4 Tab., 30 Lit. Ang.
- MaterialUnselbständiges Werk
- Datensatznummer200089047
- Quelle
- AbstractTrees in a 94-year-old jack pine (Pinus banksiana Lamb.) stand defoliated by the jack pine budworm (Choristoneura pinus Freeman) were examined to see if there was an association of root condition and stem growh with tree condition. Healthy trees had heavier root systems, larger root volumes, and larger annual volume increments than top-killed or dead trees in the years prior to elevated tree mortality within the stand. Roots of all the dead trees contained Armillaria ostoyae (Romag.) Herink (North American Biological Species I). Three of five top-killed trees and one of five healthy trees were infected by A. ostoyae. There was no clear indication whethe infection by root pathogens determines the extent to which trees are damaged following jack pine budworm defoliation, or conversely, whether repeated defoliation predisposes trees to root pathogen attack. Numbers of live branches in the crown, radial increment over the past 10 years, and prevalence of Armillaria root rot within a stand may be used to hazard rate stands prior to budworm outbreaks. The management implications of the results are discussed.
- Schlagwörter
- Klassifikation453 (Insekten [Für die weitere Unterteilung siehe Familien unter 14 oder alternativ (beschrieben nach Regelfall 1d in der Einleitung) können die Nummern alphabethisch nach Familien und Arten unterteilt werden (Appendix C)])
145.7x18.28 (Tortricidae)
416.3 (An Wurzeln und Stammbasis)
181.36 (Wurzelbeziehungen, Wurzelentwicklung usw.)
174.7 (Coniferae [Siehe Anhang D])
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