1. Responses of oaks and tanoaks to the sudden oak death pathogen after 8y of monitoring in two coastal California forests
- Author
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Richard B. Standiford, Darien Wood, Sylvia R. Mori, Pavel Svihra, Brice A. McPherson, Maggi Kelly, and Andrew J. Storer
- Subjects
biology ,Ecology ,education ,Forestry ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,biology.organism_classification ,Quercus agrifolia ,Infection rate ,Basal area ,Notholithocarpus ,Phytophthora ramorum ,Lithocarpus ,Botany ,Sudden oak death ,Pathogen ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Sudden oak death, caused byPhytophthora ramorum, is widely established in mesic forests of coastal central and northern California. In 2000, we placed 18 plots in two Marin County sites to monitor dis- ease progression in coast live oaks (Quercus agrifolia), California black oaks (Q. kelloggii), and tanoaks (Lithocarpus densiflorus), the species that are most consistently killed by the pathogen in these areas. Through early 2008, the numbers of newly infected trees increased for all species. The infection rate for trees that were asymptomatic in 2000 was 5.0%y "1 for coast live oaks, 4.1%y "1 for black oaks and
- Published
- 2010
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