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  4. Prospects for Oak Cultivation in Europe Under Changing Environmental Conditions and Increasing Pressure from Harmful Organisms
 
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Prospects for Oak Cultivation in Europe Under Changing Environmental Conditions and Increasing Pressure from Harmful Organisms

Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2024
Author
Lyubenova, Aneta
Baranowska, Marlena 
Menkis, Audrius
Davydenko, Kateryna
Nowakowska, Justyna
Borowik, Piotr
Oszako, Tomasz
Faculty
Wydział Leśny i Technologii Drewna
PBN discipline
forestry
Journal
Forests
ISSN
1999-4907
DOI
10.3390/f15122164
Web address
https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/15/12/2164
Volume
15
Number
12
Pages from-to
art. 2164
Abstract (EN)
It is assumed that climate change (global warming) worsens the living conditions for conifers and at the same time favours the cultivation of deciduous trees, including oaks. In fact, in Poland, for example, many more oaks are now being planted as forest-forming tree species than in the 1980s and 1990s. However, the monitoring of the health status of European forests (according to the International Co-operation Project) does not confirm these optimistic assumptions, and oak has been cited as one of the most damaged tree species in terms of defoliation in recent decades. The prospects for oak cultivation in European forestry are therefore a combination of abiotic conditions and biotic damage factors. This review article focuses in particular on the new threats posed by pathogenic organisms causing emerging diseases. These include newly identified bacteria responsible for the so-called Acute Oak Decline (AOD), oomycetes (especially those specialised in damaging fine roots, such as Phytophthora quercina T.Jung) and semi-parasites of the genus Loranthus. At the same time, the pressure from commonly observed insects and fungi described in connection with the complex syndrome of oak decline, which is divided into predisposing, inciting, and contributing factors (according to Manion’s disease spiral), has not abated. Therefore, international, interdisciplinary research (such as that proposed in Oakland) is needed, using modern technologies (RS remote sensing) based on the comparison of satellite images (from different years), not only to inventory the most valuable oak stands in Europe (microrefugia) but also to identify trends in changes in their condition and biodiversity. As RS has its limitations (e.g., resolution), aerial monitoring should be complemented by quantitative and qualitative inventory from the ground, e.g., monitoring of the presence of soil microorganisms using effective molecular biological methods (e.g., Next-Generation Sequencing NGS).
Keywords (EN)
  • remote sensing

  • Oakland

  • NGS

  • AOD

  • oomycetes

  • primary insects

  • secondary pests

  • Loranthus

License
cc-bycc-by CC-BY - Attribution
Open access date
December 8, 2024
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