Hard pine stem rusts on lodgepole pine at a site-preparation study in sub-boreal British Columbia: effects over 24 years

Author:

Reich Richard W.1,Heineman Jean L.2,Nemec Amanda F. Linnell3,Bedford Lorne4,Boateng Jacob O.4,Kaffanke Torsten5

Affiliation:

1. B.C. Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations, Omineca Region, 1044 Fifth Ave., 5th Floor, Prince George, BC V2L 5G4, Canada.

2. J. Heineman Forestry Consulting, 2125 E. 5th Ave., Vancouver, BC V5N 1M5, Canada.

3. International Statistics and Research Corp., P.O. Box 39, Brentwood Bay, BC V8M 1R3, Canada.

4. B.C. Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations, Resource Practices Branch, P.O. Box 9513 Stn. Prov. Govt., Victoria, BC V8W 9C2, Canada.

5. T. Kaffanke Consulting Ltd., Box 374, Vanderhoof, BC V0J 3A0, Canada.

Abstract

Site preparation can improve lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta var. latifolia Engelm. ex S. Watson) survival and growth; however, we lack information regarding possible interactions between treatment effects and the impacts of western gall rust (Endocronartium harknessii (J.P. Moore) Y. Hirats.) and comandra blister rust (Cronartium comandrae Peck). Mechanical and burning techniques examined over 24 years at a sub-boreal British Columbia site did not significantly increase rust infection rates or characteristics relative to an untreated control. Most infection occurred before age 10 years and at heights <2 m. By age 24 years, 22% and 10% of pine had sustained at least one western gall rust or comandra blister rust stem infection, respectively, but only 4% of western gall rust infected trees were dead, compared with 60% of comandra blister rust infected trees. Exploratory regression analysis of the relationship between tree volume and percent stem encirclement and infection height suggested that volume of 24-year-old pine infected with western gall rust averaged 8% less than the corresponding volume of uninfected trees. Over 24 years, estimated stand-level, rust-related volume loss was 8.4%, with the majority due to mortality from comandra blister rust. One-fifth of estimated volume loss was provisionally attributed to growth reductions among live western gall rust infected pine.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Ecology,Forestry,Global and Planetary Change

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