Science Inventory

FOLIAR INJURY SYMPTOMS AND PIGMENT CONCENTRATIONS IN RED SPRUCE SAPLINGS IN THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS

Citation:

Andersen, C., S. McLaughlin, AND W. Roy. FOLIAR INJURY SYMPTOMS AND PIGMENT CONCENTRATIONS IN RED SPRUCE SAPLINGS IN THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/J-91/259 (NTIS PB92113216), 1991.

Description:

The frequency and percent surface area covered by necrotic flecking on red spruce (Picea rubens Sarg.) needles from sapling-sized trees were examined on nine research sites on three mountains in the southern Appalachians. oliar pigment analysis was conducted on trees from two of the nine research sites. lecking increased with foliar age on all sites, and on two of the mountains, the area covered by flecks increased with elevation. bove 1720 meters on Clingman's dome, foliar flecking was found to comprise >8% of the upper needle surface area of one-year-old needles. hlorophyll A and B concentrations increased with foliar age and were greater in trees growing at the mid elevation site (1720 m) than at the high elevation site (1935 m) on Clingman's Dome. igment concentrations did not correspond to foliar flecking frequency at the two sites in common. oliar flecking appears to increase over winter and its widespread occurrence throughout the southern Appalachian suggests that regional, rather than local, site-related phenomena are involved.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( REPORT )
Product Published Date:12/31/1991
Record Last Revised:12/22/2005
Record ID: 45631