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USDA Forest Service - Northeastern Area Archive's Images

Organization: USDA Forest Service
Country: United States

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Image Subject Name Scientific Name Description
1407041 human caused injury Collecting maple syrup is a yearly ritual. Several taps a year will not harm the tree, but too many will strain its recuperative powers and cause internal injury.
1396096 royal star magnolia Magnolia stellata
1396030 small pine looper Eupithecia palpata
1395004 skidding
1395003 skidding Skidder
1396003 spruce budworm Choristoneura fumiferana parasitized egg mass
1396046 red pine shoot moth Dioryctria resinosella
1395016 log yard Air drying yard at sawmill
1396183 chanterelle Cantharellus cibarius
1398006 Lophodermium needle casts Lophodermium spp.
1398007 air pollutants
1396111 larger pine shoot beetle Tomicus piniperda male and female in gallery
1396004 spruce budworm Choristoneura fumiferana hatched
1396001 spruce budworm Choristoneura fumiferana
1396052 introduced pine sawfly Diprion similis
1396056 yellowheaded spruce sawfly Pikonema alaskensis
1396057 yellowheaded spruce sawfly Pikonema alaskensis
1396065 red pine shoot moth Dioryctria resinosella
1396044 spruce budworm Choristoneura fumiferana
1396090 northern pine sphinx Lapara bombycoides
1396137 American elm Ulmus americana
1396126 spruce spider mite Oligonychus ununguis
1396134 Armillaria root rot Armillaria mellea
1396120 walnut shoot moth Acrobasis demotella
1396116 red turpentine beetle Dendroctonus valens
1396152 red heart of pine Phellinus pini
1396054 conifer sawfly Gilpinia frutetorum
1396156 cedar-apple rust Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae
1396080 Eriophyid mites Eriophyes spp.
1396020 pine spittlebug Aphrophora cribrata
1396022 northern pitch twig moth Retinia albicapitana pitch nodule maker, Ottawa Forest
1396051 red pine sawfly Neodiprion nanulus nanulus Chippewa National Forest
1396180 Helvella fungi Helvella spp.
1396157 cedar-apple rust Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae
1396182 stinkhorn mushroom Phallus impudicus bisected egg of the fruiting stinkhorn. Note the outer membrane of the egg is a layer of jelly, then a green dusty layer, and within the centre a white spongy mass.
1396160 porcupine Erethizon dorsatum
1396165 squirrel Sciurus spp. cone torn off
1396169 pocket gophers pocket gopher damage
1396133 Armillaria root rot Armillaria mellea
1396135 Armillaria root rot Armillaria mellea
1396159 porcupine Erethizon dorsatum
1396172 rat, vole, mouse Coulee Experimental Forest
1396181 Helvella fungi Helvella spp.
1396170 pocket gophers mounds
1396083 horned oak gall Callirhytis cornigera Shawnee National Forest
1396019 pine spittlebug Aphrophora cribrata fifth instar
1396031 oak lace bug Corythucha arcuata
1396123 pecan leaf casebearer Acrobasis juglandis emerging from case
1396153 red heart of pine Phellinus pini
1396143 butternut canker Sirococcus clavigignenti-juglandacearum
1396144 Eutypella canker Eutypella parasitica Argonne Experimental Forest
1396114 red turpentine beetle Dendroctonus valens in tree struck by lightning.
1396104 old house borer Hylotrupes bajulus
1396061 bagworm Thyridopteryx ephemeraeformis
1396058 eastern pine weevil Pissodes nemorensis
1398025 conifer seedling weevil Steremnius carinatus
1396085 monarch butterfly Danaus plexippus emerged in lab
1407007 eastern hemlock Tsuga canadensis Evergreens have flowers, too. Cones grow from fertilized female cells. When ripe, cones open and scatter their seeds on the forest floor, where a new tree takes root.
1398005 frost and winter injury (general)
1398052 Dutch elm disease Ophiostoma ulmi
1396073 walkingstick Diapheromera femorata
1396074 walkingstick Diapheromera femorata
1396075 eastern hemlock looper Lambdina fiscellaria fiscellaria
1395012 processing/manufacturing Portable band mill
1396038 pine tussock moth Dasychira pinicola
1396040 maple trumpet skeletonizer Catastega aceriella
1395026 poles, posts, pilings Posts and poles
1396072 carpenter ants Camponotus spp.
1396070 carpenter ants Camponotus spp.
1396041 gall midges Asynapta spp.
1396148 butternut canker Sirococcus clavigignenti-juglandacearum
1396045 red pine shoot moth Dioryctria resinosella
1396036 pine tussock moth Dasychira pinicola unhatched egg mass
1396078 Cynipid gall wasp Andricus ignotus gall on oak; agamic generation
1396113 red turpentine beetle Dendroctonus valens
1396139 Dutch elm disease Ophiostoma ulmi
1396039 maple trumpet skeletonizer Catastega aceriella
1396136 Dutch elm disease Ophiostoma ulmi
1396173 human caused injury tapping injury
1396155 black walnut Juglans nigra walnut handling, Wilson Nursery
1396186 lackluster laccaria Laccaria laccata
1396027 yellownecked caterpillar Datana ministra
5050081 decay Decay column in red maple.
5044020 gypsy moth Lymantria dispar Gypsy moth male and female
5038075 Scleroderris canker of pine and spruce Gremmeniella abietina Green staining of G. abietina under the bark.
5052068 Scleroderris canker of pine and spruce Gremmeniella abietina European strain of G. abietina symptoms on red pine.
5038076 Scleroderris canker of pine and spruce Gremmeniella abietina Green stain of wood caused by G. abietina
5037027 Verticillium wilts Verticillium spp.
1409072 Armillaria root rot Armillaria mellea Decay associated with Armillaria mellea in this red spruce did not spread to the center, because it was already altered. The pencil shows where wall 4 separated decayed wood from sound wood that formed after the dead area stopped developing.
1409073 Armillaria root rot Armillaria mellea In this beech root, decay associated with Armillaria mellea was strongly restricted by wall 3 at the red arrows. Again, fungi do not grow at will in a tree.
1409075 red heart of pine Phellinus pini Fomes pini associated with rot produced a wedge of tissue in the bark as indicated by the red arrows. It does not infect healthy sapwood or heartwood, but only wound-altered, resin-soaked, old sapwood and young heartwood, shown by the red dot and letter W, creating a ring pattern.
1409076 red heart of pine Phellinus pini Sound heartwood separates many rings of decayed wood in this pine. The center was probably infected when it was still producing resin. Fomes pini does not grow at will in heartwood must be altered to accomodate the fungus before it can spread.
1409077 red heart of pine Phellinus pini A varient of Fomes pini that occurs in fir on the west coast produced large wedges of infection in the bark. When these wedges coalesce, they will girdle the tree.
1409079 Strumella canker Strumella coryneoidea The seesaw action between this red oak and Strumella coryneoidea went on for many years. The green arrows show where the tree kept the fungus from spreading by producing a wood barrier. At the red arrows a new fungus wedge broke out and began to advance, thus enlarging the canker.
1407068 sapsucker injury and food for many species.
1407004 flowering dogwood Cornus florida or in a cluster of many small flowers, such as this dogwood blossom.
1407005 eucalyptus Eucalyptus spp. Flowers vary widely in their structure and appearance. This eucalypt blossom has an array of showy male parts but not petals.
1407006 oak Quercus spp. On many trees, male and female parts grow separately. These are catkin, the male flowers of an oak. In some species, female flowers grow on one tree and male flowers on another.
1407009 northern red oak Quercus rubra An acorn....
1407010 oak Quercus spp. becomes an oak, drawing energy from the seed for its first spurt of growth.
1407019 sugar maple Acer saccharum When their work is done, they fall,
1407020 nutrient cycling decompose and become part of the soil.
1407075 nutrient cycling and returns to the soil and air,
1395028 Specialty forest products
1395027 birch Betula spp. Birch tops for specialty (decorative) markets
1395023 harvesting whole tree chipping
1395049 pulpwood Unloading hardwood pulpwood at chipping plant in Illinois, 1960.
1396118 airplane U.S.F.S. Beaver plane, 1962
1396119 airplane U.S.F.S. Beaver plane
1395059 charcoal
1395056 charcoal
1395058 charcoal
1395052 charcoal
1395053 charcoal
1395054 charcoal
1395055 charcoal
1407003 yellow-poplar Liriodendron tulipifera Life begins for a tree when a male and a female cell meet. These cells may occur together in a single flower,
1407024 root zone A tree's life extends beneath the ground. Here, larger roots provide a support system,
1407025 root zone while finer filaments absorb moisture and minerals.
1407023 branch union they, too, fall away.; showing action of natural pruning at the branch union.
1395062 slashing and bucking bucking a log; the tip of the log is elevated so that as the cut is made, the log will fall and the saw blade will not be pinched
1395064 felling cutting a felling notch
1408052 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) On these red maple samples, cambial dieback is consistent on all wounds, whether treated or control.
1407052 Dutch elm disease Ophiostoma ulmi Like all living things, trees eventually die and decay, victims of many living and manmade agents. The agent here is Dutch elm disease. To ward off this widespread infection, keep elm trees well pruned. If they do become infected, cut and destroy the diseased trees as soon as possible.
1409066 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Holes are commonly made in trees for injections, and for tapping maple sap. The sections here are from the same maple tree. Paraformaldehyde was added to the hole in the left section, but not to the control section on the right. This shows how chemicals may reduce a tree's ability to compartmentalize, so that decay develops rapidly.
1408061 tree injections When injecting or implanting substances keep the wound as small and shallow as possible. Treatments can be beneficial when properly applied.
1408064 tree injections Never make deep wounds or apply high pressure,
1408066 tree implants large holes created in injections or implants may create cankered areas and may keep the wounds from closing.
1408067 tree implants Follow the same careful procedure with implants.
1408068 tree implants When implants are first inserted, they cause very little damage to healthy trees. The story changes, however, as the injury is repeated year after year.
1408070 cabling Cables and braces can be beneficial if properly used. Do not anchor hardware in decayed wood, which fell away after the sample was cut. Only new wood that formed around the hardware remained sound.
1408071 bracing The same thing happened here. Sound new wood formed around the rod. Try to keep the tree healthy after bracing.
1408072 bracing Don't use sharp-edged washers; they cut into the tree and obstruct closure.
1408073 cabling Avoid cables angles that will cause screws to move, thus inhibiting firm closure.
1408076 root problems Other trees look safe, but have a weak root system. Always check for root decay when making a hazard tree inspection.
1408077 decay Fungus fruit bodies on old branch cuts are reliable indicators of internal decay.
1408078 risk tree You can also use electrical methods to detect decay and determine the relative vitality of trees.
1409002 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) The sawyer on the left is Dr. George Hepting, a pioneer researcher on tree decay. He observed compartmentalization of decay in trees in 1935. Dissecting trees with a crosscut saw was extremely difficult. Until 1959 our view of tree decay was obtained mainly from crosscut sections.
1409010 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Hollows result when microorganisms digest the wood that was present at the time of wounding.
1409011 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Hollows are found in trees that have heartwood
1409012 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Hollows are found in trees that have heartwood
1409013 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Hollows are found in trees that have heartwood
1409014 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) The same patterns of compartmentalization occur in roots.
1409015 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Hollows do not always develop in the center, as evidenced in this tropical hardwood.
1409016 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Trees compartmentalize injured and infected wood. To aid in understanding compartmentalization, we develop a model called CODIT, and acronym for Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees.
1409017 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) The CODIT model has two parts. Part I has three walls: no. 1 resists vertical spread, no. 2 resists inward spread, and no. 3 resists lateral spread. Part II has one wall, no. 4 which separates wood present at the time of injury and infection from new wood.
1409018 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) CODIT is a model that applies to both non-heartwood and heartwood-forming trees
1409019 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) CODIT is a model that applies to both non-heartwood and heartwood-forming trees
1409020 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) This white oak had five basal wounds. The triangular-shaped discolored and decayed wood was formed by walls 2 and 3 which resisted spread, and wall 4 which separated infected wood from healthy wood.
1409021 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Decay was less advanced in this western hemlock.
1409022 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) The green arrows point to wall no. 1 in this red maple. In an abstract sense, each growth ring is a new tree and each tree used the same mechanisms to resist the spread of decay.
1409024 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Wall 4 extended entirely around the trunk of this sweetgum tree, a common, but not inevitable, occurrance.
1409025 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) In this birch tree, vertical arrows show wall no. 1, while horizontal arrows point to wall no. 4.
1409026 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) This slice of western hemlock was taken from the top of a wounded area. The red arrows shoe wall 4 within the growth rings. Points A and B show where wall 4 ends.
1409027 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Wall 4 also forms after wood is infected. This elm had Dutch elm disease; the red arrows show where recent infections were walled off.
1409028 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) In response to a wound, this Norway spruce developed a wall 4, indicated by the red arrows, within the growth ring. The green arrows show how far the cells that produced resin extended.
1409029 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Wall 4 is a model representation of a barrier zone, which is composed of strong protective tissue. This is the barrier zone from a spruce sample.
1409030 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Though strong in one sense, the barrier zone is structurally weak and may pull apart, as it did in this white pine.
1409032 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Trees form barrier zones around hardware.
1409033 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) After a tree is wounded, a wall 4 forms, as it did in this oak. Radial shakes often develop at the edges of the wound, where the pen and pencil are pointing. When pressure occurs due to heat, cold or felling, shakes may split outward. These splits are called frost cracks.
1409034 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) In this oak, the red arrows show the limits of an old wound. An open crack formed where callus first closed the injury. The green arrows point to radial shakes that split outward, while the blue arrows show ring shakes associated with other wounds. The purple arrows point to internal radial shakes.
1409035 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) This black walnut was wounded at the green arrows when it was 1 inch in diameter. At the red arrows the calus infoll cut into the trunk and caused an internal crack.
1409036 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Multiple cracks form when many radial shakes associated with old wound split outward, as in this post oak. The cracks start at the circular barrier zone.
1409037 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) When decay and cracks combine, as they did in this black locust, wall 2 is the tree's only defense against the spread of decay.
1409038 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) A decayed basal sprout on this oak was a weak spot from which a crack spread inward at the purple arrows and outward at the red arrows. "S" indicates sapwood, "H" is heartwood, and the dotted line shows the boundary between them.
1409039 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) This is a typical cracking pattern. The purple arrows point to where callus closed the wound.
1409040 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) In response to insect wounds, this maple formed wall 4. Radial cracks developed later at the blue arrows.
1409041 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Wall 4 in this eucalypt separated to form a ring shake. Felling caused a radial crack at the 6 o'clock position.
1409043 tree anatomy For proper pruning, start with identifying the branch bark ridge. Instead of cutting behind it or leaving a stub, cut along the red line.
1409045 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Decay is essential for branch shedding. If decay surmounts the tree's natural chemical boundary, it will be walled off within the stub.
1409046 flush cut Flush cuts wound the trunk, which responds by forming wall 4. These walls often split. Microorganisms easily enter a trunk wound. Samples from an oak tree show that callus formed after it was wounded, an indication that decay did not develop.
1409048 flush cut Decay developed above and below the 13-year-old flush cut on this black walnut.
1409049 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) The leader on this beech was killed, and a branch became a new leader. Decay developed to the width fo the old leader and spread only downward.
1409052 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Wound B in this maple was well compartmentalized. Wound A weakened at wall 2, because its inner edge was too close to the central column of discolored wood.
1409053 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) The same drill patterns appear in this oak, showing that heartwood compartmentalizes injured and infected wood.
1409054 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Decay spread to the center of the beech at left. Before it was wounded, this tree was healthy from bark to pith, while the beech on the right already had a central column of altered wood. The drill wounds reached the center of both trees, but discolored and decayed wood associated with wounds did not penetrate the central column of the altered tree.
1409056 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Again, the drill holes on this aspen penetrated to the red markes, yet discolored wood stopped at the arrows.
1409058 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) An example of this phenomenon is seen here, where decayed wood associated with the dead branch B did not spread into A or outward into C.
1409059 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) The heartwood is separate from the column of decayed wood on this sample, proving that microorganisms do not grow at will in trees.
1409061 termites Termites quickly invade wound-altered eucalypt wood.
1409064 fire In a white oak severely wounded by fire, heartwood formation comes to a standstill. Wounds stop hearwood from forming, while they initiate the formation of discolored wood.
1407074 decay brown cubical rot
1408062 tree implants Wounds close rapidly on fast-growing trees. Try not to make new wounds every year, or inflict them directly above or below older wounds.
1408063 tree implants Don't use high doses of chemicals. Small openings can cause large problems when phytotxic chemicals are used.
1408041 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) These sections came from a maple tree that was wounded experimentally. A wide variety of decay resulted, but all wounds showed the same type of thick callus ring. Again, callus is associated with the growth rate of the tree, not with the decay process.
1408053 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) We found many decay-causing fungi in tissue taken from treated and control wounds. If a client insists on using wound dressing, apply a very thin coat but only after you've compelted all the other procedures for maintaining a healthy tree.
1408056 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) When healthy wood is wounded, the tree walls off the injured areas.
1408057 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) When new wounds are added to wood that is already discolored and decayed from older injuries, much larger columns of infected wood will result.
1408058 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) These two maples received similar wounds at the same time. The one on the left shows little injury, but the one on the right sustained considerable damage.
1408059 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Trees can wall off wounds effectively, but as damage accumulates over time, internal columns of infected wood begin to merge. This happens even with small wounds,
1408060 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) wounds inflicted in the tough root flair area.
1408047 root sprouts Prune basal sprouts as soon as you idnetify the desired dominant stems. Choose those that grow lowest on the old stump. Don't worry that decay may spread from a cut sprout or into a growing dominant sprout; it won't happen.
1408049 flush cut Fruit bodies of fungi often burst through wound dressings. This is a sure sign of decay, which can be stimulated by too much dressing.
1408050 flush cut This same tree had been cut in many places. Harsh flush-cuts and heavy coats of dressing will indeed cause the tree, as well as the people and property around it, some real problems.
1408051 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) We conducted research on wound dressings on hundreds of trees. After dissecting them, we found no difference between treated and control trees. These samples from the same white oak show no difference in callus formation.
1409067 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Holes have helped researchers select individuals within a species that compartmentalize rapidly and effectively. All trees in Populus species, clone 42, were strong compartmentalizers, while all trees in clone 49 were not. It appears that the capacity to compartmentalize is under strong genetic control.
1409068 annosum root disease Heterobasidion annosum CODIT is also applicable to root rots. A tree either rapidly stops the spread of infection, as shown in this pine infected by Fomes annosus, or it does not, letting the infection girdle and kill the root or butt. A cross-section was cut near the top of the dead area....
1409069 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) the fungus was walled off in the wood after being stopped in the bark.
1409071 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) In this spruce sample, the pencil indicates the limites of the dead bark. Fungi did not spread into new wood that formed after the infected wood was contained.
1409074 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) The bottoms of roots usually decay first and then connect with the wood between them at the tree butt. Decay will then be most advanced between the roots, as in this balsam fir. Trees with decay at this junction often split above the roots.
1408043 crown reduction (pruning) When removing a leader, slant the cut gently as shown on the left' a flat cut invited rapid decay development.
1408044 crown reduction (pruning) On the other hand, a severely slanted cut also encourages the spread of decay upward and downward.
1408021 human caused injury This oak was severely wounded when it was small. A crack later formed over the callus closure. Lawn mowers cause many injuries that later become cracks. Injured roots or roots killed during planting may also lead to cracks five or even 10 years later.
1408022 flush cut Cracks also start above flush-cut branches. One has started here at the pencil point on this maple which was flush-cut two years ago.
1408024 pruning (general) This is the right way to cut a large living branches.
1408025 pruning (general) Every branch has a thick bark ridge separating it from the main stem. Never cut behind the branch bark ridge. Never leave a stub, as shown here. Always cut as close as possible to the outer edge fo the branch bark ridge, as indicated by the red line.
1408026 pruning (general) The inner side of the sample shows the hard inner wood of the branch bark ridge. If you cut behind the ridge at the arrow you'll injure the main stem. Cut the branch, not the trunk, by following the red line.
1408027 tree anatomy You can easily locate the branch bark ridge on most trees
1408028 tree anatomy branch bark ridge on a small branch
1408029 pruning (general) Here is a proper cut on a small oak branch
1408030 pruning (general) Callus will ring proper cut on a small oak branch
1408032 deadwood and snags As branches wane and die, they are invaded by beneficial decay-causing fungi. These organisms spread to the base of the branch and branch collar, but rarely go beyond this point.
1408034 deadwood and snags According to nature's design, the branch is then shed.
1407053 Armillaria root rots Armillaria spp. This is shoestring root rot. Named for the black bands that the fungus produces under dead bark, shoestring root rot often attacks weakened trees. Keep your trees healthy and vigorous through a well designed program of tree care.
1407057 root lifting, soil heaving, and windthrow or changing the grade and moisture content of sites can cause major problems for trees. Consider the consequences before the work begins.
1407061 wood decay Wood products are sometimes invaded by fungi, though these organisms are different from those that attack living trees. Keep wood products dry and protect them with preservatives to discourage fungi.
1407042 bracing The same advice goes for inserting hardware to strengthen branches and trunks,
1407044 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Trees produce a wall around injured and infected wood. You should never disturb this natural barrier. Injuries form an indelible record of a tree's life: a hollow will be equal in diameter to the diameter of the tree when it was injured.
1407049 pruning (general) Never prune where this saw is poised, behind the bark ridge. Cut in front of the ridge, as indicated by the red line. Never prune when the leaves are forming. As mentioned earlier, don't paint wounds except for cosmetic reasons; then use a thin coat of a commercial dessing, never a house paint
1407026 tree anatomy Intersection of tracheids with ray cells in the secondary xylem; Though they shed many outer parts, trees retain their wood, both healthy and decayed, in a highly ordered fashion. Viewed thorugh a microscope, this stained section of woody tissue reveals the order...
1407027 tree anatomy cross-section through xylem
1407028 tree anatomy This is a magnified section of American elm.
1407029 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) These microscopic units in woody tissue can be likened to rooms or compartments, which a tree can close off it they become injured or infected; illustrating walls 2, 3, and 4
1407031 fire Throughout the ages, many trees have been wounded by fire, both natural and man-caused.
1407036 ribbed crack Many problems can be traced to wounds. The split seam in this piece of oak is called a frost crack, but the trouble actually began with an injury that occurred when the tree was one inch in diameter. As callus formed around the wound, a seam developed and later split. The tree may have been injured by a lawnmower or some type of equipment. If people knew the consequences of their actions,
1407040 tree anatomy The gum secreted by this peach tree is a natural dressing. All trees have similar self-healing mechanisms.
1408003 tree grate poor soils, severe wounding,
1408008 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Cavities in trees start with wounds and dead branches or leaders. A cavity's diameter will be the same as that of the tree when it was wounded or when the branch or leader died. The leader on this birch tree died when the tree was the diameter of the cavity.
1408009 decay From another view you can see the dead leader beside the sound new leader. When filling cavities, do no injure the callus or break the band of hard wood around the decayed area.
1408013 wetwood Use metal tubes to drain wetwood fluids. This keeps wetwood fluids from spreading over the bark.
1408014 Compartmentalization Of Decay In Trees (CODIT) Wounds spell trouble for trees. Do everyhting you can to prevent them. Trees are able, however, to wall off wounds.
0488023 gypsy moth Lymantria dispar forest types susceptible and potentially susceptible to attacks
1396103 eastern redcedar Juniperus virginiana male cones
1396100 eastern redcedar Juniperus virginiana female berries
1396154 black walnut Juglans nigra walnut storage in nursery
1398045 sycamore lace bug Corythucha ciliata
1395001 felling
1395002 felling
1395061 skidding Skidding with small tractor
1395051 chipping Hickory chipping plant. 1962.
1395025 transport Log truck
1395017 dry kilns
1395022 transport Log truck
1395005 loading
1396184 ectomycorrhizae mycorrhizal fungi in circles around white spruce
1396168 woodpeckers sapsucker caused ring shakes
1396177 ectomycorrhizae Pisolithus tinctorius ectomycorrhizal short roots from machine innoculated plots
1396178 ectomycorrhizae Pisolithus tinctorius ectomycorrhizal short roots from machine innoculated plots
1396179 ectomycorrhizae Pisolithus tinctorius ectomycorrhizal short roots
1396176 larch bolete Suillus grevillei mycorrhizal
1396185 Hebeloma mushroom Hebeloma spp. mycorrhizal
1396158 cedar-apple rust Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae
1396128 locust leafminer Odontota dorsalis
1396129 hackberry nipple gall parasitoid Eurytoma semivenae
1396130 hackberry nipple gall parasitoid Eurytoma semivenae
1396131 spruce spider mite Oligonychus ununguis
1396132 sapstreak disease of sugar maple Ceratocystis coerulescens
1396149 Nectria canker Nectria spp.
1396151 beech bark disease Nectria coccinea
1396145 Eutypella canker Eutypella parasitica showing yearly progression of canker
1396146 chestnut blight or canker Cryphonectria parasitica dead tree, picture taken 1943
1396101 log deck
1396102 log deck
1396105 twolined chestnut borer Agrilus bilineatus
1396106 elm spanworm Ennomos subsignaria
1396107 large aspen tortrix Choristoneura conflictana
1396108 larger pine shoot beetle Tomicus piniperda typical bicolored dust associated with this species
1396110 larger pine shoot beetle Tomicus piniperda bluestain associated with T. piniperda attack
1396121 walnut shoot moth Acrobasis demotella
1396122 walnut shoot moth Acrobasis demotella frass
1396115 red turpentine beetle Dendroctonus valens
1396112 larger pine shoot beetle Tomicus piniperda cast shoots caused by T. piniperda maturation feeding
1396079 pales weevil Hylobius pales gall close-up
1396082 horned oak gall Callirhytis cornigera
1396087 post oak grasshopper Dendrotettix quercus
1396089 northern pine sphinx Lapara bombycoides
1396084 mourning cloak butterfly Nymphalis antiopa
1396094 spring cankerworm Paleacrita vernata
1396097 mugo pine Pinus mugo
1396028 yellownecked caterpillar Datana ministra
1396029 orangestriped oakworm Anisota senatoria
1396023 variable oakleaf caterpillar Lochmaeus manteo
1396024 variable oakleaf caterpillar Lochmaeus manteo
1396025 variable oakleaf caterpillar Lochmaeus manteo
1396026 variable oakleaf caterpillar Lochmaeus manteo
1396042 eastern pine seedworm Cydia toreuta
1396043 gall midges Asynapta spp.
1396059 lacewings
1396060 lacewings
1396053 European spruce sawfly Gilpinia hercyniae
1396047 variable oakleaf caterpillar Lochmaeus manteo
1396049 shieldbacked pine seed bug Tetyra bipunctata
1396062 bagworm Thyridopteryx ephemeraeformis adult emerging from bag
1396064 European pine shoot moth Rhyacionia buoliana
1396055 yellowheaded spruce sawfly Pikonema alaskensis Chippewa National Forest
1396066 basswood thrips Neohydatothrips tiliae
1396067 gypsy moth Lymantria dispar
1396069 uglynest caterpillar Archips cerasivorana
1396002 spruce budworm Choristoneura fumiferana and pupa
1396010 bronze birch borer Agrilus anxius exit hole
1396011 bronze birch borer Agrilus anxius exit hole
1396012 bronze birch borer Agrilus anxius
1396015 Saratoga spittlebug Aphrophora saratogensis flagging damaged trees
1396018 Saratoga spittlebug Aphrophora saratogensis

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