Abstract

Hemlock woolly adelgid (Adelges Tsugae Annand, HWA) outbreaks are posing a major threat to eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis L. Carr.) and Carolina hemlock (Tsuga caroliniana Engelm.) forest landscapes in the eastern USA. As foundation species, hemlocks play a variety of functional roles in forest landscapes. These species usually occur as isolated canopies and mixed species in landscapes where variation in topography is extreme. Spatially explicit inventory information on HWA induced hemlock mortality at landscape scale does not exist. High resolution aerial imageries enable landscape scale assessment even at the individual tree level. Accordingly, our goal was to investigate spatial pattern and distribution of HWA induced hemlock mortality using a high resolution aerial image mosaic in the Linville River Gorge, Southern Appalachians, western North Carolina. Our study objectives were: 1) to detect dead trees within the Lower Linville River watershed; 2) to estimate the area occupied by dead trees in the forest canopy surface; 3) to investigate the relationship of dead hemlocks and topography; and 4) to define the spatial pattern of the dead trees. We found ca. 10,000 dead trees within the study area, occupying over 7 ha of the canopy surface with an average area of 36 m2 per dead tree. The density of the dead trees was higher in proximity to the Linville River, at higher elevations, and on northern and northwestern aspects. Spatial pattern of the dead trees was generally clustered at all spatial scales. We suggest that although the reduction in plant biomass resulting from herbivory within the landscapes is modest, impact of the clustered distribution of hemlock mortality, especially in the riparian zones, is noteworthy. Our analysis of the pattern of hemlock decline provides new means for projecting future impacts of HWA on the range of hemlock distribution in eastern North America.

Highlights

  • Biological invasions are one of the greatest environmental challenges of today (Dix et al 2010)

  • Our study objectives were to: 1) detect dead trees within the Lower Linville River watershed; 2) estimate the area occupied by dead trees in the forest canopy surface; 3) investigate the relationship of hemlock mortality and topography; and 4) define the spatial pattern of the tree mortality

  • The majority of the dead trees were found in the northern half of the study area and relatively close to the Linville River (Figure 3(a))

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Summary

Introduction

Biological invasions are one of the greatest environmental challenges of today (Dix et al 2010). Monitoring and minimizing the impacts of damage by invasive pest insects has become a central issue in the field of forest research (Pimentel et al 2005; Dukes et al 2009). Carr.) (Pinaceae) and Carolina hemlock (Tsuga caroliniana Engelm.) in eastern North American forests. The HWA, native to East-Asia, is a sap-sucking insect feeding on hemlock parenchyma cells. The ecology of HWA in the eastern USA is well documented (see McClure 1991; Stadler et al 2006). Eastern and Carolina hemlocks of all size and age classes are infested. Eastern and Carolina hemlocks have shown little or no resistance to HWA (Eschtruth et al 2006)

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