Effects of selective cutting on the epidemiology of armillaria root disease in the southern interior of British Columbia

Citation
Dj. Morrison et al., Effects of selective cutting on the epidemiology of armillaria root disease in the southern interior of British Columbia, CAN J FORES, 31(1), 2001, pp. 59-70
Citations number
31
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
Journal title
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH-REVUE CANADIENNE DE RECHERCHE FORESTIERE
ISSN journal
00455067 → ACNP
Volume
31
Issue
1
Year of publication
2001
Pages
59 - 70
Database
ISI
SICI code
0045-5067(200101)31:1<59:EOSCOT>2.0.ZU;2-8
Abstract
In selectively cut and undisturbed parts of four mature stands, five 0.04-h a plots were established, and trees were measured, mapped, and examined for aboveground symptoms of armillaria root disease. Trees were felled, and st umps and their root systems were removed by an excavator and were measured and examined for Armillaria lesions. Isolates from root lesions, rhizomorph s associated with lesions, and basidiomes collected in or adjacent to plots were of Armillaria ostoyae (Romagn.) Herink. All trees were assigned to on e of five tree condition classes based on the location of lesions and host response. The merchantable volume in each class was calculated. In undistur bed plots, incidence of trees with A. ostoyae lesions on roots was about 10 % in the dry climatic region compared with about 75% in the moist region an d 35% in the wet region. In plots in the selectively cut parts of the stand s, 50-100% of stumps were colonized by A. ostoyae. Results of a logistic re gression analysis showed that selective cutting was associated with a stati stically significant increase in the probability of a tree having A. ostoya e lesions, where the magnitude of the increase depended on tree diameter. T he increase in the probability of a tree being diseased was accompanied by an increase in the proportion of primary roots with lesions and the average number of lesions per diseased tree; however, the increases in disease int ensity were statistically significant at only two (one dry and one moist) o f the four sites. The percentage of merchantable volume threatened or kille d by A. ostoyae was usually higher in cutover than undisturbed plots.