Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 20 OF 112

Main Title Decline of Montane Boreal Ecosystems in Central Europe and the Southern Appalachian Mountains.
Author Bruck, R. I. ;
CORP Author North Carolina State Univ. at Raleigh.;Corvallis Environmental Research Lab., OR.
Year Published 1984
Report Number EPA-R-806912; EPA/600/J-87/252;
Stock Number PB88-108691
Additional Subjects Growth ; Elevation ; Forest trees ; Mortality ; Abnormalities ; Leaves(Plants) ; Discoloration ; Reproduction(Biology) ; Europe ; Applachian Mountains ; Fir trees ; High altitude ; Ecosystems
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NTIS  PB88-108691 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation 8p
Abstract
For more than a decade scientists from Western Europe and New England have documented an insidious dieback and/or decline of certain forest types, in particular high-altitude coniferous forests. Silver fir and Norway spruce are undergoing a severe decline in Hartz Mts., Black Mts., and the Bavarian Alps. Similar declines have been reported from western Czechoslovakia. Symptomatology of this syndrome includes chlorosis and abscission of older needles and a dramatic suppression of annual increment and growth. In addition, tree and herbaceous vegetative reproduction is in many cases either suppressed or absent. Recent surveys of the NC Mt. Mitchell (6,684' mean seas level) summit cone areas indicate a similar increment reduction along with symptoms similar to those observed in Europe (i.e. declining, chlorotic, low vigor spruce-fir stands). This decline appears to be in a much earlier stage of progression when compared to the above conditions.