Abstract

SUMMARYThe type of chemical treatment used to control regrowth from hardwood stumps affects their colonization by fungi. Since such stumps often act as sources of infection for Armillaria mellea this may have important consequences. Ammonium sulphamate generally favours growth of species causing rapid decay, some of which compete well with A. mellea, whereas 2,4,5‐trichlorophenoxyacetic acid tends to promote growth of Chondro‐stereum purpureum which is replaced by A. mellea. The former treatment is recommended for situations where serious damage from A. mellea seems likely to occur, because the best hope of control is to ensure rapid killing of stump roots.Prompt colonization of stumps was obtained by inoculating the cut surface with spores of a wood‐rotting fungus and then treating it with 40% ammonium sulphamate. In birch stumps jointly inoculated with Coriolus versicolor and A. mellea the amount of wood occupied by the latter after 4 yr was greatly reduced by comparison with controls inoculated with A. mellea alone. Stump inoculation might be worth developing for use in valuable plantations and other intensively managed areas such as parks and gardens, especially where measures such as stump excavation are impracticable.

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