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Potential replacements for northwoods black ash in a changing climate: the confluence of two challenges

Informally Refereed
Authors: Louis Iverson, Anantha Prasad, Kathleen S. Knight, Daniel A. Herms, Stephen Matthews, Matthew Peters, Annemarie Smith, Robert Long
Year: 2011
Type: Paper (invited, offered, keynote)
Station: Northern Research Station
Source: In: Parra, Gregory; Lance, David; Mastro, Victor; Reardon, Richard; Benedict, Chuck, comps. 2011 emerald ash borer national research and technology development meeting; 2011 October 12-13; Wooster, OH. FHTET-2011-06. Morgantown, WV; U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection, Forest Health Technology Enterprise Team: 63-64.

Abstract

By most indications, the fate of all North American native and non-urban ash (Fraxinus spp.), in the wake of emerald ash borer (EAB), is bleak. This study is concerned with creating a better understanding of the potential replacements of black ash (Fraxinus niger) in native stands in the Northwoods (northern Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan) as the ash dies out.

Citation

Iverson, Louis; Prasad, Anantha; Knight, Kathleen S.; Herms, Daniel A.; Matthews, Stephen; Peters, Matthew; Smith, Annemarie; Long, Robert. 2011. Potential replacements for northwoods black ash in a changing climate: the confluence of two challenges. In: Parra, Gregory; Lance, David; Mastro, Victor; Reardon, Richard; Benedict, Chuck, comps. 2011 emerald ash borer national research and technology development meeting; 2011 October 12-13; Wooster, OH. FHTET-2011-06. Morgantown, WV; U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, State and Private Forestry, Forest Health Protection, Forest Health Technology Enterprise Team: 63-64.
https://www.fs.usda.gov/research/treesearch/42822