Other Scholarly Content
 

Western spruce budworm defoliation trend relative to weather in the Northern Region, 1969-1979

Pubblico Deposited

Contenuto scaricabile

Scarica il pdf
https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/defaults/1v53jz24t

Descriptions

Attribute NameValues
Creator
Abstract
  • Western spruce budworm defoliated area in the Northern Region has differed significantly across three discrete geographic zones during the past decade. Aerially visible defoliation in northern Idaho increased from 1.7 million acres in 1969 to a high of 2.2 million acres in 1974, and declined to none in 1979. Defoliated area in western Montana increased from 1.8 million acres in 1969 to a high of 2.8 million acres in 1972 and declined to 0.6 million acres in 1979. Conversely, defoliated area in eastern Montana fluctuated at low levels between 0.1 and 0.7 million acres between 1969 and 1974, and then rose to a high of 1.6 million acres in 1979. Analysis of defoliation trend, the ratio of acres defoliated in the current year by acres defoliated the prior year, and weather during budworm larval and pupal periods during the past decade revealed the following relationships: Defoliation trend in all three geographic areas varied (a) directly with mean maximum temperature during May, June, and July of the year before, and (b) inversely with frequency of measurable precipitation during May, June, and July of the year before. Based on warm, dry conditions throughout the Region in 1979, we predict a general increase in budworm populations in the Northern Region in 1980.
Resource Type
Date Available
Date Issued
Series
Subject
Dichiarazione dei diritti
Publisher
Language
File Format
File Extent
  • 9974152 bytes
Digitization Specifications
  • Scanned at 600 DPI using a Cannon DR-9080C in TIF format. PDF generated through Capture Perfect using OmniPage Professional 15 for textual OCR.
Replaces

Le relazioni

Parents:

This work has no parents.

Elementi