Major research findings involving Swiss needle cast and its causal agent:
- Fertilizer influence on SNC disease severity across a gradient of disease: The Beyond N Study
- Effects and Impacts of SNC
- SNC Treatments
- Quantification, Assessment, and Severity Prediction
- Tree Genetics, Resistance, and Improvement
All cited publications are available on our Publications page.
Fertilizer influence on SNC disease severity across a gradient of disease: The Beyond N Study
- The Beyond N study was initiated in Winter 2006/2007 to help address questions about the impacts of fertilization on SNC disease severity and tree growth in the Oregon Coast Range.
- Objectives:
- To test whether specific nutritional amendments might diminish or offset the effects of SNC on tree growth & foliage retention.
- To test the growth response of individual trees to fertilizations across a range of SNC disease severity.
- To evaluate foliar nutrient dynamics of SNC infected DF following fertilization.
- To determine if specific fertilization treatments worsen or ameliorate SNC disease severity, as measured by pseudothecia density on DF needles from individual treated trees.
- Methods: 16 study sites were established across a gradient of SNC from Coos Bay, OR to Mineral, WA in winter 2006/2007.
- Target stands were 15-25 yrs old with 200-400 TPA and no past fertilization.
- At each site, 10 replications of 5-8 treatments were randomly assigned; some sites excluded one or more of the site-specific fertilization treatments (below).
- Circular .025-ac treatment plots (5.7 m radius) were centered on an undamaged plot tree.
- Measurements on plot center trees included DBH, ht, ht to crown, sapwood width, diameter at 18ft and foliage retention.
- Foliage was sampled to assess foliar nutrient levels and SNC disease severity, and 2 soil cores per plot were sampled to assess soil nutrients before and after treatment.
- 7 Treatments:
- Control
- N urea (200 lbs N/ac)
- Lime (calcium carbonate; 1000 lbs Ca/ac)
- Calcium (calcium chloride; 100 lbs Ca/ac)
- Phosphorus (mono-sodium; 500 lbs P/ac)
- Kinsey (site-specific; fertilized over 2 yrs to avoid over application)
- Fenn (site-specific)
- Products: Analyses will account for stand variables and look for the effect of fertilization on various response variables, including:
- Change in foliage retention
- Change in volume growth
- Change in form quotient
- Change in sapwood area at crown base
- Pseudothecia density (infection index) on the needles of treated trees (determined from foliage collected in Spring 2010)
- Preliminary Results:
- N fertilization (urea) is only beneficial to tree growth on sites with low site indices (<160), relatively higher % Ca: % N, and relatively higher soil pH (i.e. significant positive volume responses varied by site).
- Nitrogen, phosphorous and Kinsey treatments significantly changed soil pH on treatment plots during the course of the study.
- After adjusting for site and tree covariates (DBH, ht, crown ratio, and plot-level basal area), increases in volume production were marginally greater with nitrogen and lime treatments only (~3.4% increase).
- Average foliage retention decreased on all but 2 sites (including controls) over the three years of the study; overall, fertilizer treatments do not appear to have dramatically impacted needle retention; pseudothecia counts are currently underway to determine if there are fertilization impacts on disease severity.