Forests (2021) 12 (8 - 976)

From Pestinfo-Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search

Wojciech Pusz, Anna Baturo-Ciesniewska, Agata Kaczmarek-Pienczewska, Katarzyna Patejuk and Pawel Czarnota (2021)
Is the survivability of silver fir under condition of strong ungulate pressure related to mycobiota of bark-stripping wounds?
Forests 12 (8 - 976)
Abstract: The aim of the research was to check whether the healing of bark-stripping wounds of the silver fir tree trunks reduces the share of wood-decomposing fungi, which may be the result of inter-species interactions. The study carried out in Gorce National Park in Polish Western Carpathians analyzed drill holes of sapwood from three types of wounds (fresh, healed and old) on fir trunks with a diameter at breast height (DBH) of 4.0–16.9 cm as a result of bark-stripping by red deer (Cervus elaphus). In the wood of fresh wounds Alternaria alternata (Fr.) Keissl. and Arthrinium arundinis (Corda) Dyko and B. Sutton had the largest share in mycobiota. Phompsis spp. and the species Sydowia polyspora (Bref. and Tavel) E. Müll. and Epicoccum nigrum Link were also isolated. The dominants in old wounds were Eutypa spp., Phomopsis spp. and Cylindrobasidium evolvens (Fr.) Jülich. Healed wounds were dominated by Trichoderma atroviride P. Karst, a fungus antagonistic to many fungal pathogens. Such properties are shared by A. arundinis, especially common in fresh wound wood. It seems that these fungi support the process of wounded tree regeneration (healing of wounds) and limit the activity of wood-decaying fungi in old age, which makes fir survival very high. Thus, even a strong red deer pressure cannot be considered the basic factor determining the dynamics of fir in this part of the Carpathians.
(The abstract is excluded from the Creative Commons licence and has been copied with permission by the publisher.)
Full text of article


Research topic(s) for pests/diseases/weeds:
damage/losses/economics


Pest and/or beneficial records:

Beneficial Pest/Disease/Weed Crop/Product Country Quarant.


Cervus elaphus Fir (Abies) Poland