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Mary
Lou Fairweather, Plant Pathologist, Forest Health Protection,
USDA Forest Service, Flagstaff, Arizona
mfairweather@fs.fed.us
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Aspen
Decline in Northern Arizona Coauthors Kelly Barton
and Mike Manthei
An accelerated decline
of aspen communities has recently occurred across northern Arizona,
following two defoliation events and several years of drought. The
Southwestern Region’s 1998 aerial detection survey showed
a doubling of defoliated aspen acres (>85,000), compared to previous
years, followed by another doubling in 1999 (>170,000). Although
1998 defoliation was caused by foliar insects and pathogens, the
1999 defoliation was due to frost damage following a severe June
snowstorm, which occurred across most of Northern Arizona. Since
2000, aerial surveyors have switched from reporting acres defoliated
to acres in decline, the latter marked by thinning crowns and mortality.
Many small lower elevation clones appear completely dead. We began
evaluation and monitoring of affected aspen at the stand level on
the Coconino National Forest (NF) in 2003, followed by the Apache-Sitgreaves
NF in 2004. This monitoring project describes mortality levels,
regeneration condition, and stand and site variables that are influencing
decline. Preliminary results show that elevation, which varies from
6,800 to 9,300 feet, is a key factor in both tree species composition
and severity of decline. Lower elevation sites (<7,500 feet)
are on northerly aspects and are dominated by aspen with a ponderosa
pine and oak component. In some sites, more than half the overstory
aspen died in the past 3 years and more mortality is expected as
many trees have only 10 to 30 percent of the original crown left.
Higher elevation sites were on various aspects with a mix of conifer
species and a higher ratio of live to dead aspen. Since decline
appears to be progressive, remeasurements will determine detrimental
levels of crown dieback. Aspen regeneration is slight, especially
at lower elevations, but ungulate damage is rampant. A few sites
had 100 percent browse damage. The large die-off of mature aspen
trees in many lower elevation sites coupled with browsing by ungulates
is expected to result in type conversion of many ecologically unique
and important sites across the state. |
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