Crown symptoms and other aboveground variables were examined on 36 Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco.) (40209 years old), 46 white fir (Abies concolor (Gord. & Glend.) Lindl.) (36165 years old), and 97 ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa Dougl. ex Laws.) (64220 years old) trees in northern New Mexico and southern Colorado. Root systems of all trees were excavated to determine extent of root disease. Symptoms observed on infected trees, including reductions in height growth, changes in foliage characteristics, and crown dieback, worsened as the number of infected roots increased. Trees with aboveground symptoms had a significantly higher (p < 0.05) number of infected lateral roots than trees without symptoms. In mixed conifer stands on the Archuleta Mesa, Colo., four qualitative crown symptoms were used to accurately detect Armillaria ostoyae (Romagn.) Herink and (or) Heterobasidion annosum (Fr.) Bref. infection of Douglas-fir (21/22, or 95%) and white fir (19/28, or 68%). Similarly, 61% (48/79) of the A. ostoyae infected ponderosa pine trees on the Jemez site, N.M., were detected using the qualitative Thomson vigor rating system. Discriminate analysis, using more thorough variables and analysis, resulted in correct infection classifications of 82%, 85%, and 78% for Douglas-fir, white fir, and ponderosa pine, respectively, suggesting that aboveground variables are reasonable indicators of root disease.
An important component of forest ecosystems in the southern Rocky Mountains is the belowground biomass associated with mature stands of ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa). Information on root biomass is fundamental to understanding the dynamics of ecological systems and designing studies of those systems. Ponderosa pine trees from a stand in northern New Mexico were cut and their root systems excavated. Biomass of all roots > 0.6 cm in diameter and the belowground portion of the stump was determined on a dry-weight basis. A regression model was constructed using data on breast-height diameter and belowground stump and coarse-root biomass from 42 trees in the stand. Diameter at breast height ranged from 18.3 to 67.6 cm, and belowground biomass ranged from 3 to 576 kg. West. J. Appl. For. 16(1):18–21.
A stand of ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) severely impacted by Armillaria root disease was treated with five different levels of sanitation by root removal in an attempt to reduce losses to root disease in the regenerating stand. Treatments included: (1) Trees pushed out, maximum removal of roots by machine, visible remaining roots picked out by hand; (2) Trees pushed out, maximum removal of roots by machine; (3) Trees pushed out, no further removal of roots; (4) Trees pushed out, large stumps left, otherwise maximum removal of roots by machine; (5) Clear logged, sod scalped between the stumps, stumps retained. After 20 yr there was a general reduction in mortality with improved sanitation, although treatment #3 was less effective than expected. In each type of stand regeneration (thinned, unthinned, and planted), only treatment #1 consistently expressed less mortality than the other treatments, and differences were significant in the thinned and unthinned portions of the experiment between treatments #1 and #5. Crop tree height and diameter growth after 20 yr were also best in treatment #1. These results do not necessarily indicate that push-over logging is ineffective, but rather they show that after trees and intact stumps have been pushed out, further cleaning is needed to reach the satisfactory sanitation level achieved in treatment #1. Hand cleaning as done in treatment #1 would certainly be cost prohibitive, but perhaps that level of root removal could be achieved in light textured soils with judicious use of a land-clearing brush rake. West. J. Appl. For. 15(2):92-100.
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