Laminated Root Rot and Fumigant Injection Affect Survival and Growth of Douglas-Fir
Author(s) -
Constance A. Harrington,
Walter G. Thies
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
western journal of applied forestry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1938-3770
pISSN - 0885-6095
DOI - 10.1093/wjaf/22.3.220
Subject(s) - chloropicrin , fumigation , dose , horticulture , douglas fir , biology , root rot , toxicology , botany , zoology , pharmacology
Laminated root rot caused by Phellinus weirii is a significant disease of western conifers; it is important to understand the effects of the disease on tree growth and survival and, for some management objectives, to develop treatments that will reduce those effects. This study was conducted in a 47-year-old Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) stand in northwest Oregon. First, we evaluated the effects of root system infection on diameter and height growth. Growth rates were lowest in trees with high infection levels; root infection level affected diameter growth more than height growth. Second, we evaluated the effects of fumigation treatments on tree growth. The nine treatments were as follows: three dosages of methylisothiocyanate (MITC), four dosages of chloropicrin (trichloronitromethane), one dosage of Vorlex [20% MITC, 80% chlorinated C(3) hydrocarbons (v/v)], and a control. The fumigants were applied by inserting them into holes drilled into the base of live trees. After nine growing seasons, all three of the treatments applying different dosages of MITC and the treatment applying the lowest dosage of chloropicrin had higher tree survival rates than the untreated control, and the growth rates in those four fumigation treatments were not significantly different from growth in the surviving control trees.
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