EFFECT OF FOREST STAND AND EDGE CHARACTERISTICS ON THE VULNERABILITY OF JACK PINE STANDS TO JACK PINE BUDWORM (CHORISTONEURA-PINUS-PINUS) DAMAGE

Citation
J. Kouki et al., EFFECT OF FOREST STAND AND EDGE CHARACTERISTICS ON THE VULNERABILITY OF JACK PINE STANDS TO JACK PINE BUDWORM (CHORISTONEURA-PINUS-PINUS) DAMAGE, Canadian journal of forest research, 27(11), 1997, pp. 1765-1772
Citations number
33
Categorie Soggetti
Forestry
ISSN journal
00455067
Volume
27
Issue
11
Year of publication
1997
Pages
1765 - 1772
Database
ISI
SICI code
0045-5067(1997)27:11<1765:EOFSAE>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
We determined how factors originating within individual jack pine (Pin us banksiana Lamb.) forest stands (local effects) and factors originat ing in neighbouring forest stands (adjacency effects) affected and mod ified severity and consequences of defoliation during a jack pine budw orm (Choristoneura a pinus pinus Freeman) (Lepidoptera, Tortricidae) o utbreak in northern Michigan from 1992 to 1994. Defoliation, top kill, and tree mortality were monitored in 104 stands annually and forest i nventory data were collected for each stand. Defoliation was widesprea d in 1992 and then declined in 1993 and 1994. The oldest stands were m ost susceptible to defoliation, top kill, and mortality. Contrary to e xpectations, mortality was highest in relatively good sites. However, characteristics of adjacent stands also affected the susceptibility of a focal stand: stands adjacent to younger trees sustained more defoli ation than would be expected based on their age. We hypothesize that p ollen cones, which contribute to survival of early instar larvae, may have been more abundant in trees exposed to full light, a situation li kely to occur along the edges of stands growing next to openings, road s, or young trees. Thus, both the stand age and boundary to a younger and shorter forest stand may contribute to budworm outbreak at the loc al level.