The increasing frequency and severity of windthrow events affecting the forestry industry in New Zealand have raised important management issues surrounding the rate of colonisation of fallen trees by sapstain fungi and the time available for salvage harvesting before sapstain degradation limits potential economic returns. These fungi are known to be spread by a multitude of factors including wind, rain splash, harvesting processes and insect vectoring. Apart from the ecological interest in these interactions between fungi, plants and insects, sapstain fungi are also economically important because their hyphae discolour the sapwood and reduce the overall quality of the timber. The amount of time available to salvage harvest damaged trees is...
Wood decay fungi are considered to be dispersed by wind, but dispersal by animals may also be import...
Blue stain, caused by members of the Ophiostomatales, is of concern to the forest industry because i...
Forest management practices have changed the over-all structure of the Fennoscandian forest landscap...
Vector-pathogen dynamics play a central role in understanding tree health and forest dynamics. There...
Vector-pathogen dynamics play a central role in understanding tree health and forest dynamics. There...
Fungal pathogens associated with bark beetles represent one of the most significant problems to fore...
Forests in the northern hemisphere are largely dominated by conifers and provide a key habitat for a...
Advancing climate change is affecting the health and vitality of forests in many parts of the world....
Many saproxylic beetle species (those associated with dead wood) are considered to be threatened by ...
The introduced pine bark beetle Hylastes ater has been present in New Zealand for around 100 years. ...
Most wood-inhabiting fungi are assumed to be dispersed primarily by wind, with the exception of a fe...
This study examined aspects of the pest status and ecology of Hylastes ater in Pinus radiata refores...
Bark beetles and their associated fungi kill trees readily, but we often ignore which organism is th...
At least two interactions exist among these important groups of organisms: (1) that of the bark beet...
Sirex noctilio F. (Hymenoptera: Siricidae) is an introduced pest of pines (Pinus spp.) in several co...
Wood decay fungi are considered to be dispersed by wind, but dispersal by animals may also be import...
Blue stain, caused by members of the Ophiostomatales, is of concern to the forest industry because i...
Forest management practices have changed the over-all structure of the Fennoscandian forest landscap...
Vector-pathogen dynamics play a central role in understanding tree health and forest dynamics. There...
Vector-pathogen dynamics play a central role in understanding tree health and forest dynamics. There...
Fungal pathogens associated with bark beetles represent one of the most significant problems to fore...
Forests in the northern hemisphere are largely dominated by conifers and provide a key habitat for a...
Advancing climate change is affecting the health and vitality of forests in many parts of the world....
Many saproxylic beetle species (those associated with dead wood) are considered to be threatened by ...
The introduced pine bark beetle Hylastes ater has been present in New Zealand for around 100 years. ...
Most wood-inhabiting fungi are assumed to be dispersed primarily by wind, with the exception of a fe...
This study examined aspects of the pest status and ecology of Hylastes ater in Pinus radiata refores...
Bark beetles and their associated fungi kill trees readily, but we often ignore which organism is th...
At least two interactions exist among these important groups of organisms: (1) that of the bark beet...
Sirex noctilio F. (Hymenoptera: Siricidae) is an introduced pest of pines (Pinus spp.) in several co...
Wood decay fungi are considered to be dispersed by wind, but dispersal by animals may also be import...
Blue stain, caused by members of the Ophiostomatales, is of concern to the forest industry because i...
Forest management practices have changed the over-all structure of the Fennoscandian forest landscap...