Article

 

Summer and winter drought drive the initiation and spread of spruce beetle outbreak. Pubblico Deposited

https://scholar.colorado.edu/concern/articles/db78tc67q
Abstract
  • This study used Landsat-based detection of spruce beetle (Dendroctonus rufipennis) outbreak over the years 2000-2014 across the Southern Rocky Mountain Ecoregion to examine the spatiotemporal patterns of outbreak and assess the influence of temperature, drought, forest characteristics, and previous spruce beetle activity on outbreak development. During the 1999-2013 period, time series of spruce beetle activity were highly spatially correlated (r > 0.5) at distances <5 >km, but remained weakly correlated (r = 0.08) at distances >400 km. Furthermore, cluster analysis on time series of outbreak activity revealed the outbreak developed at multiple incipient locations and spread to unaffected forest, highlighting the importance of both local-scale dispersal and regional-scale drivers in synchronizing spruce beetle outbreak. Spatial overlay analysis and Random Forest modeling of outbreak development show that outbreaks initiate in areas characterized by summer, winter, and multi-year drought and that outbreak spread is strongly linked to the proximity and extent of nearby outbreak, but remains associated with drought. Notably, we find that spruce beetle outbreak is associated with low peak snow water equivalent, not just summer drought. As such, future alterations to both winter and summer precipitation regimes are likely to drive important changes in subalpine forests.
Creator
Date Issued
  • 2017-10-01
Academic Affiliation
Journal Title
Journal Issue/Number
  • 10
Journal Volume
  • 98
File Extent
  • 2698-2707
Subject
Ultima modifica
  • 2019-12-05
Identifier
  • PubMed ID: 28752623
Resource Type
Dichiarazione dei diritti
DOI
ISSN
  • 0012-9658
Language

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