Abstract

AbstractTree-ring analysis was used to relate the pattern of eastern larch (Larix laricina) growth to insect defoliation over the last three centuries in boreal Quebec. Four sampling sites were selected along a moisture gradient, from a well-drained site to a forested peatland near Lake Bienville, in an area where larch is currently recovering from a recent outbreak of the larch sawfly (Pristiphora erichsonii), a notoriously recurrent defoliator of eastern larch. In the two dry sites, the eastern larch tree-ring series clearly showed eight periods of defoliation-induced growth suppression since 1782. Growth depressions were not as consistent in the more humid sites, especially at the turn of the century (i.e. between 1883 and 1911), when only one infestation was clearly expressed among three successive ones at the dry sites. Time series filtering indicated sharp synchrony of defoliation events among sites. Radial and apical growth during infestations correlated in a complex way, with radial growth being m...

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