Increased risk of damage from Phytophthora diseases under climate change
Sudden Oak Death
and other Phytophthora tree diseases are predicted to be the
most damaging of all tree diseases if climate change makes conditions in
Western North America wetter and warmer. This finding is one of the
conclusions from "A Risk Assessment of Climate Change and the Impact of
Forest Diseases on Forest Ecosystems in the Western United States and
Canada," by John Kliejunas. Drawing on a large body of published
research, the report details the effects of eight forest diseases under
two climate-change scenarios – warmer and drier conditions, and warmer
and wetter conditions. The likelihood and consequences of increased
damage to forests from each disease as a result of climate change were
analyzed and assigned a risk value of high, moderate, or low. The risk
value is based on available biological information and subjective
judgment. Free copies of the report are available via download or by
mail at http://www.fs.fed.us/psw/publications/documents/psw_gtr236/.
Funded by the USDA Forest Service's Western Wildland Environmental
Threat Assessment Center and the Pacific Southwest Research Station, the
risk assessment was conducted as part of the Climate Change and Western
Forest Diseases initiative.
Kliejunas, J.T. 2011. A risk assessment of climate change and
the impact of forest diseases on forest ecosystems in the Western
United States and Canada. Gen. Tech. Rep. PSW-GTR-236. Albany,
CA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Southwest
Research Station. 70 p.
From COMTF April Report
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