Disease symptoms and fungi on dying ash trees (Fraxinus excelsior L.) in Staszów Forest District stands

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Jan Karczmarski
Paweł Bąk

Abstract
This paper revisits a hilltop forest stand growing in the Madohora Reserve in Beskid Mały. The stand was first described by Myczkowski in 1955 as a spruce forest characteristic of the upper-montane forest zone. Based on the measurement of 11 circular study plots in 2005, new values for the following parameters were established: species composition, stand volume, stand basal area and storey structure, volume of both standing and fallen-dead trees, frequency and species composition of regeneration, as well as vitality and self-thinning of trees. The average stand volume in 2005 was 276 m3•ha-1, of which spruce comprised 67.5 %. Between the years 1955-2005, the proportion of spruce in the stand decreased by 30-50 %. In the lower storey and the regeneration, spruce is being replaced by intensively regenerating fir. This succession, as well as the poor vitality and high intensity of self-thinning of spruce, indicate that ongoing natural stand transformation is significantly reducing the proportion of spruce and may even result in its total elimination from the stand.

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How to Cite
Karczmarski, Jan, and Paweł Bąk. “Disease Symptoms and Fungi on Dying Ash Trees (Fraxinus Excelsior L.) in Staszów Forest District Stands”. Leśne Prace Badawcze, vol. 71, no. 4, Dec. 2010, pp. 369-80, doi:10.2478/v10111-010-0032-z.
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