Abstract

The relationships between abundance of dwarf mistletoe (Arceuthobium americanum Nutt.) and the canopy structure of stands of lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta var. murrayana (Grev. & Balf.) Engelm.) were investigated in the central Oregon pumice zone. Foliage height profiles were generated for stands containing light, moderate, and heavy infestations of A. americanum, and the vertical distribution of P. contorta foliage was modeled using the Weibull distribution. Stand-level changes in the Weibull parameters σ (scale parameter) and c (shape parameter) as well as other canopy indices were related to the abundance of A. americanum, the density of competing tree species, and stand-level abiotic factors. Foliage intercept diagrams showed that heavily infested stands had more foliage in the lower canopy and less in the upper canopy than lightly infested stands, but that total canopy height and canopy volume were similar regardless of infestation level. We also found that dwarf mistletoe abundance was strongly related to σ (r = –0.74, p < 0.001) and c (r = –0.54, p < 0.0001). Since heavily infested stands contained fewer large but many more small P. contorta than lightly infested stands, we conclude that A. americanum causes the canopy of infested stands to change, in part, by inducing demographic changes in populations of the host tree. These results illustrate the significant effects that dwarf mistletoes can have on the structural diversity of conifer forest communities and have important consequences for the conservation and management of these systems.

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