Landscape patterns of hemlock decline in New England due to the introduced hemlock woolly adelgid
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] D. Ostaff,et al. Patterns of balsam fir mortality caused by an uncontrolled spruce budworm outbreak , 1989 .
[2] Lee C. Wensel,et al. Notes and Observations: Aspect Transformation in Site Productivity Research , 1966 .
[3] R. Everett. Patterns and pathways of biological invasions , 2000 .
[4] Svetlana Gouli,et al. Survival of Hemlock Woolly Adelgid (Homoptera: Adelgidae) at Low Temperatures , 1998, Forest Science.
[5] P. Vitousek. Biological Invasions and Ecosystem Properties: Can Species Make a Difference? , 1986 .
[6] D. Orwig,et al. Vegetation Response Following Hemlock Woolly Adelgid Infestation, Hemlock Decline, and Hemlock Salvage Logging , 2002 .
[7] R. G. Mitchell,et al. Analysis of spatial patterns of lodgepole pine attacked by outbreak populations of the mountain pine beetle , 1991 .
[8] R. Rogers. HEMLOCK STANDS FROM WISCONSIN TO NOVA SCOTIA: TRANSITIONS IN UNDERSTORY COMPOSITION ALONG A FLORISTIC GRADIENT' , 1980 .
[9] Vernon,et al. Is Pseudoscymnus tsugae the Solution to the Hemlock Woolly Adelgid Problem ? : An Early Perspective , 2000 .
[10] P. N. Annand. A new species of Adelges (Hemiptera, Phylloxeridae) , 1924 .
[11] H. M. Raup,et al. Deciduous Forests of Eastern north America , 1952 .
[12] Svetlana Gouli,et al. Low Lethal Temperature for Hemlock Woolly Adelgid (Homoptera: Adelgidae) , 1999 .
[13] Julia A. Jones,et al. Plant-pest interactions in time and space: A Douglas-fir bark beetle outbreak as a case study , 1999, Landscape Ecology.
[14] G. Stephens,et al. Influence of crown class on survival and development of Betulalenta in Connecticut, U.S.A. , 1996 .
[15] D. Maclean,et al. Effects of stand and site characteristics on susceptibility and vulnerability of balsam fir and spruce to spruce budworm in New Brunswick , 1997 .
[16] M. Davis. Outbreaks of forest pathogens in Quaternary history , 1981 .
[17] M. McClure. Role of Wind, Birds, Deer, and Humans in the Dispersal of Hemlock Woolly Adelgid (Homoptera: Adelgidae) , 1990 .
[18] R. Rogers. Forests dominated by hemlock (Tsuga canadensis): distribution as related to site and postsettlement history , 1978 .
[19] G. E. Nichols. The Hemlock--White Pine--Northern Hardwood Region of Eastern North America , 1935 .
[20] N. Mantel. The detection of disease clustering and a generalized regression approach. , 1967, Cancer research.
[21] McClure. Using natural enemies from Japan to control hemlock woolly adelgid , 1995 .
[22] John A. Witter,et al. Regeneration of Fraser Fir at Mt. Mitchell, North Carolina, After Depredations by the Balsam Woolly Adelgid , 1986 .
[23] Richard G. Lathrop,et al. Monitoring hemlock forest health in New Jersey using Landsat TM data and change detection techniques , 1997 .
[24] J. Battles,et al. Potential impacts of hemlock woolly adelgid (Adelges tsugae) on eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) ecosystems. , 1996 .
[25] R. Lathrop,et al. The effects of site factors on the rate of hemlock decline: a case study in New Jersey , 2000 .
[26] R. Lathrop,et al. Quantifying the habitat structure and spatial pattern of New Jersey (U.S.A.) salt marshes under different management regimes , 2000, Wetlands Ecology and Management.
[27] B. Manly. Randomization, Bootstrap and Monte Carlo Methods in Biology , 2018 .
[28] D. Leopold,et al. Pathogens, Patterns, and Processes in Forest EcosystemsPathogens influence and are influenced by forest development and landscape characteristics , 1995 .
[29] L. Filion,et al. Mid-Holocene Hemlock Decline in Eastern North America Linked with Phytophagous Insect Activity , 1996, Quaternary Research.
[30] Theodore E. Howard,et al. Eastern hemlock: a market perspective , 2000 .
[31] M. McClure,et al. Reshaping the Ecology of Invading Populations of Hemlock Woolly Adelgid, Adelges tsugae (Homoptera: Adelgidae), in Eastern North America , 1999, Biological Invasions.
[32] D. Foster,et al. Direct and indirect ecosystem consequences of an invasive pest on forests dominated by eastern hemlock , 2002 .
[33] Joan E. Luther,et al. Forecasting the susceptibility and vulnerability of balsam fir stands to insect defoliation with Landsat Thematic Mapper data , 1997 .
[34] 飯塚 寛,et al. Aspect transformation in site productivity research , 1967 .
[35] H. J. Lutz,et al. The Practice of Silviculture , 1954, Agronomy Journal.
[36] John E. Baumgras,et al. Ring shake in eastern hemlock: frequency and relationship to tree attributes , 2000 .
[37] John A. Young,et al. Assessment of landscape correlates of Eastern hemlock decline due to hemlock woolly adelgid , 1999 .
[38] D. Foster,et al. Stand, landscape, and ecosystem analyses of hemlock woolly adelgid outbreaks in southern New England: an overview , 2000 .
[39] K. Shields,et al. Overview of hemlock health , 2000 .
[40] G. Berlyn,et al. Hemlock Woolly Adelgid (Homoptera: Adelgidae): Stylet Bundle Insertion and Feeding Sites , 1995 .
[41] M. Abrams,et al. A 300-year history of disturbance and canopy recruitment for co-occurring white pine and hemlock on the Allegheny Plateau, USA. , 1996 .
[42] Hongbin Wang,et al. Chinese Coccinellidae for biological control of the hemlock woolly adelgid: description of native habitat , 2000 .
[43] J. Aber,et al. Hemlock woolly adelgid impacts on community structure and N cycling rates in eastern hemlock forests , 1999 .
[44] Shepard M. Zedaker,et al. A comparison of overstory community structure in three southern Appalachian spruce-fir forests , 1992 .
[45] D. Orwig,et al. Hemlock Woolly Adelgid , 2019 .
[46] David R. Foster,et al. FOREST RESPONSE TO THE INTRODUCED HEMLOCK WOOLLY ADELGID IN SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND, USA , 1998 .
[47] V. Radeloff,et al. EFFECTS OF INTERACTING DISTURBANCES ON LANDSCAPE PATTERNS: BUDWORM DEFOLIATION AND SALVAGE LOGGING , 2000 .
[48] Victor C. Mastro,et al. Invasion by Exotic Forest Pests: A Threat to Forest Ecosystems , 1995 .
[49] D. Simberloff,et al. BIOTIC INVASIONS: CAUSES, EPIDEMIOLOGY, GLOBAL CONSEQUENCES, AND CONTROL , 2000 .
[50] Kathleen S. Shields,et al. Using Satellite Images to Classify and Analyze the Health of Hemlock Forests Infested by the Hemlock Woolly Adelgid , 1999, Biological Invasions.
[51] M. Enserink. Biological Invaders Sweep In , 1999, Science.
[52] D. E. Hill,et al. Soils of Connecticut. , 1980 .
[53] S. Salom,et al. Past and current status of HWA in eastern and Carolina hemlock stands. , 1996 .
[54] Andrew M. Liebhold,et al. Landscape characterization of forest susceptibility to gypsy moth defoliation. , 1994 .
[55] Arthur Cronquist,et al. Manual of Vascular Plants of Northeastern United States and Adjacent Canada , 2004 .
[56] Kathleen S. Shields,et al. A Technique to Identify Changes in Hemlock Forest Health over Space and Time Using Satellite Image Data , 1999, Biological Invasions.
[57] G. F. Smith,et al. Patterns of Overstory Composition in the Fir and Fir-Spruce Forests of the Great Smoky Mountains After Balsam Woolly Adelgid Infestation , 1998 .
[58] M. McClure. Density-dependent feedback and population cycles in Adelges tsugae (Homoptera : Adelgidae) on Tsuga canadensis , 1991 .
[59] J. Jenkins,et al. Influences of eastern hemlock mortality on nutrient cycling , 2000 .
[60] Manual of Vascular Plants of Northeastern United States and Adjacent Canada. , 1963 .
[61] D. Orwig. Stand Dynamics Associated with Chronic Hemlock Woolly Adelgid Infestations in Southern New England , 2002 .
[62] D. Foster. Hemlock's future in the context of its history: an ecological perspective , 2000 .
[63] M. McClure. Evidence of a Polymorphic Life Cycle in the Hemlock Woolly Adelgid, Adelges tsugae (Homoptera: Adelgidae) , 1989 .