Abstract

Tree-ring data from a mature balsam fir forest, located at the top of Mount Mégantic (elevation 1100 m), southern Quebec, suggest that insect defoliators were major disturbance factors in the development of high-altitude balsam fir forests. A comparison between the radial growth trend of balsam fir (Abies balsamea (L.) Mill.), a host species of the spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferana Clem.), and paper birch (Betula papyrifera Marsh), a nonhost species, showed that several growth depressions in the balsam fir chronology corrresponded to documented spruce budworm outbreaks in southern Quebec in the 1910s, 1950s, 1970s, and possibly in the 1870s. Tree mortality was extensive during the last infestation because of the relatively old age (>60 years) of many balsam fir and, possibly, to the cumulative impact of defoliation. The tree-ring series from paper birch showed several drops in radial growth after the 1930s, possibly related to the large-scale birch dieback that occurred in eastern North America. Macrofossil data (insect remains) from one sample of the uppermost organic soil layers (F horizon) confirm the presence of the spruce budworm at the study site. The ecological role of insect defoliators is discussed in the context of the high-altitude balsam fir forests in northeastern North America where abiotic disturbances are considered the primary controlling factors in stand dynamics.

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