Fifty-Year Impacts of the Beech Bark Disease in the Bartlett Experimental Forest, New Hampshire

Records from the early 1950s on the Bartlett Experimental Forest in New Hampshire showed that the percentage of American beech trees infected with heavy beech scale and Nectria was up to the 80 to 90% range. An inventory of beech bark disease conditions in three stands in 2004 showed that an older,...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inNorthern Journal of Applied Forestry Vol. 23; no. 2; pp. 141 - 143
Main Author Leak, W.B
Format Journal Article Trade Publication Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bethesda Oxford University Press 01.06.2006
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Records from the early 1950s on the Bartlett Experimental Forest in New Hampshire showed that the percentage of American beech trees infected with heavy beech scale and Nectria was up to the 80 to 90% range. An inventory of beech bark disease conditions in three stands in 2004 showed that an older, uneven-aged stand managed by individual tree selection for 50 years had over 70% of the basal area in clean- (or disease-free) and rough-barked trees--trees that showed resistance or partial resistance to the disease; 15% of the basal area was clean. In contrast, an adjacent essentially unmanaged stand had well over 60% of the basal area in Nectria-damaged trees--those with sunken bark because of cambial mortality. A young unmanaged stand had a little over 60% of the basal area in mostly rough-barked trees. Records indicate that the amount of beech was not reduced by the disease in any of the inventoried stands. Apparently, single-tree selection over a 50-year period has substantially improved the disease resistance and merchantable potential of the stand.
Bibliography:http://hdl.handle.net/10113/34537
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0742-6348
1938-3762
DOI:10.1093/njaf/23.2.141