2013
DOI: 10.1002/jqs.2631
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Drought, disease, defoliation and death: forest pathogens as agents of past vegetation change

Abstract: The temperate and boreal forests of Europe and North America have been subject to repeated pathogen (fungal disease and phytophagus insect) outbreaks over the last 100 years. Palaeoecology can, potentially, offer a long-term perspective on such disturbance episodes, providing information on their triggers, frequency and impact. Mid-Holocene declines in Tsuga and Ulmus pollen dominate the Quaternary literature on forest pathogens, yet the role of pathogens, and even the presence of pathogenic fungal diseases, d… Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…The northwest European elm decline (3700-3600 B.C.E.) may have been caused in part by the spread of a pathogen, such as the fungal disease Ophiostoma, carried by the elm bark beetle (Scolytus scolytus), which saw habitat expansion with clearance for agriculture (72).…”
Section: Four Key Phases Of Anthropogenic Transformationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The northwest European elm decline (3700-3600 B.C.E.) may have been caused in part by the spread of a pathogen, such as the fungal disease Ophiostoma, carried by the elm bark beetle (Scolytus scolytus), which saw habitat expansion with clearance for agriculture (72).…”
Section: Four Key Phases Of Anthropogenic Transformationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In scientific and popular publications, the spatial scale and intensity of recent outbreaks are typically portrayed as unprecedented (Raffa et al 2008;Bentz et al 2009), a perception that is due in part to the limited availability of longer-term ecological records to contextualize recent outbreaks (Waller 2013). Improving our understanding of past bark beetle dynamics would be useful for discussing recent outbreaks in terms of commonly used management metrics, such as disturbance return interval (Fettig et al 2007).…”
Section: Public Perceptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This type of the forest is really susceptible to droughts that can trigger insect outbreaks (Haynes et al, 2014). There are not many insect outbreaks records published in palaeoecological literature, and the focus was mostly on the bark beetles (Waller, 2013;Morris et al, 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%