
Email:
wshepperd@fs.fed.us

Email: jguyon@fs.fed.us
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Wayne
D. Shepperd is a Research Silviculturist at the U.S. Forest Service
Rocky Mountain Research Station in Fort Collins, Colorado. He holds
a BS in Outdoor Recreation, and MS and Ph.D. degrees in Silviculture
from Colorado State University. A Colorado native, Dr. Shepperd
has been with the Forest Service since 1969 and will retire in January.
He has conducted research on aspen since the 1970’s and has
outlasted most (but not all) of his contemporaries to become a recognized
“aspen geezer."
John Guyon is a Plant
Pathologist at the U.S. Forest Service Forest Health Protection
Field Office in Ogden Utah. He holds a BS in Botany from the University
of Illinois, and a master's in Forest Pathology from Colorado State
University. A migratory native of the midwest, John has been with
the Forest Service since 1989, starting out with Rocky Mountain
Research Station, and has been stationed in Ogden for the last 15
years. He conducted research on aspen diseases and environmental
stress back in graduate school and recently set up a system of 75
monitoring plots in Utah, Nevada and western Wyoming to examine
the insects and diseases present in aspen stands.
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Abstract:
Massive aspen die-off in the western U.S.: What is going on?
Wayne D. Shepperd, USDA-FS
Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fort Collins, CO, and John Guyon,
USDA-FS State and Private Forestry, Ogden, UT
Aspen die-off differs
from normal aspen vegetative succession or decline in that mature
trees die quickly within a year or two and no new sprouting occurs
as a result. Lack of sprouting may indicate that lateral roots are
also dead, preventing aspen from re-occupying the site. Die-off
seems to begin in epicenters and spread radially through an affected
aspen stand. Stands on all topographic positions, moisture regimes,
and soil types are affected, and the phenomenon has been reported
throughout the west from Arizona into Alberta. Die-off can affect
one clone and leave other nearby clones untouched. Younger age classes
and advanced regeneration are often not affected to the same extent
as mature overstory trees in the same clone. Cytospora cankers,
poplar borers, and other damage or stress agents are often associated
with die-off epicenters.
Our presentation will
discuss factors that may be associated with aspen die-off and present
potential hypotheses to be investigated in multidisciplinary research
to identify causal agents or environmental factors contributing
to aspen die-off and determine whether possible management options
exist to reduce the risk of die-off, or loss of parent roots.
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