Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
90141 Forest Ecology and Management 2006 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

A two-step modeling strategy was applied to develop a survival model for loblolly pine plantations infected with fusiform rust. Data came from repeated measurements of 40 permanent paired plots: one plot of the pair was left to develop completely untreated and the other had a mid-rotation understorey vegetation removal treatment. The model consists of two complementary parts. The first part is a logistic function predicting the probability of tree death occurring over a period, which is mainly influenced by the number of trees per acre, age, site index, and the percentage of fusiform rust infection. The second part consists of two equations for estimating stem number reduction for uninfected and infected trees. The mortality rate for infected trees was higher than that for uninfected trees. The predictive ability for total surviving trees is generally improved by the sum of predicted uninfected and infected components. The number of surviving trees decreases with increasing productivity and with increasing level of fusiform rust infection. Mid-rotation understorey vegetation removal had no significant effect on survival for loblolly pine plantations.

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