Yesterday I visited a stand on the Clearwater NF where it appears that H. irregulare is
killing ponderosa and lodgepole pine. Expanding infection centers of pole to mature pines
around large resinous pine stumps that look like they are about 50 years since cutting,
pine decay, white/tan ectotrophic mycelium on roots of affected pines while Douglas-fir
and grand fir ingrowth are unaffected by root disease fits well with this guess. I could
not find any conks but will be attempting some isolations from the wood and ectotrophic
mycelium to see what comes out.
The district silviculturist had been planning a regeneration harvest and regenerating by
planting western larch/western white pine. Does anyone have any recent references on which
Heterobasidion species and what severity can be expected on western white pine? I seem to
recall that western white can act differently than hard pines but I haven't been able
to pull much information together yet.
Thanks!
[Forest Service Shield]
Paul Zambino, PhD
Plant Pathologist
Forest Service
Region 1 Forest Health Protection, Coeur d'Alene Field Office
p: 208-765-7493
c: 208-446-4251
f: 208-765-7307
pzambino@fs.fed.us<mailto:pzambino@fs.fed.us>
3815 N Schreiber Way
Coeur d'Alene, ID 83815
www.fs.fed.us<http://www.fs.fed.us/>
[
http://wwwstatic.fs.usda.gov/images/email/usda-logo.png]<http://usda.gov…
Logo]<https://twitter.com/forestservice>[Facebook
Logo]<http://facebook.com/USDA>
Caring for the land and serving people
This electronic message contains information generated by the USDA solely for the intended
recipients. Any unauthorized interception of this message or the use or disclosure of the
information it contains may violate the law and subject the violator to civil or criminal
penalties. If you believe you have received this message in error, please notify the
sender and delete the email immediately.