Climate Change-Driven Cumulative Mountain Pine Beetle-Caused Whitebark Pine Mortality in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Area
2.2. Landscape Assessment System and Mountain Pine Beetle-Caused Mortality Rating System
2.3. Spatial Scale of Landscape Assessment System
2.4. Landscape Assessment System Data Collection and Processing
2.4.1. Flightline Development
2.4.2. Over-Flights and Oblique Aerial Photo Capture
2.4.3. Image Processing
2.4.4. Photo Point Generation
2.4.5. Catchment-Level Photo Generation
2.4.6. Mortality Assessment and Mapping
2.5. Precision Assessment
2.6. Accuracy Assessment
3. Results
3.1. Oblique Aerial Photos
3.2. Point Level Mortality Data
3.3. Catchment-Level Mortality Map
3.4. Precision Assessment
3.5. Accuracy Assessment
4. Discussion
4.1. Accuracy Assessment Limitations
4.2. Examining Cumulative Mortality over Time
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Numeric Rating | Mortality Level | Description |
---|---|---|
0–0.75 | Trace | Green forest with trace levels of mortality. “Trace” mortality refers to a catchment that contains an occasional gray or red tree and there is no evidence of mortality expanding to neighboring trees. |
1–1.75 | Low | Green forest with occasional spots of gray or red trees across the catchment. The increasing frequency of current year red spots is assessed with a 1.25, 1.5, and 1.75 rating. Red or gray spots do not show evidence of multi-year mountain pine beetle-caused mortality. |
2–2.75 | Moderate | Primarily green forest with multiple spots of red and/or gray trees across the catchment. Spots show evidence of two or more years of subsequent mortality. The increasing magnitude of these spots is assessed with a 2.25, 2.5 and 2.75 rating. |
3–4 | Severe | Primarily red forest where spots of red and gray trees have coalesced across the catchment. A catchment may display a varying degree of coalescing spots ranging from initial coalescence, category 3, to increasing coalescence that is assessed with a 3.25, 3.5, 3.75 and 4 rating where essentially the entire whitebark pine overstory is red. |
5.1–5.4 | Old attack | Old attack mortality where a catchment may contain a varying degree of dead (gray) trees and remaining green forest after a mountain pine beetle attack. This variation is captured with a 5.0–5.4 rating based on the amount of dead and gray whitebark pine overstory. These mortality intensity values are equivalent to those found in the 0–4 categories (i.e., a 5.35 rating is equal to a 3.5 at the end of the outbreak cycle). Rating of 5.x pertains to an old attack (gray trees) as opposed to a 1–4 that indicates active attack (red trees). |
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Macfarlane, W.W.; Howell, B.; Logan, J.A.; Smith, A.L.; Rasmussen, C.C.; Spangler, R.E. Climate Change-Driven Cumulative Mountain Pine Beetle-Caused Whitebark Pine Mortality in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. Forests 2023, 14, 2361. https://doi.org/10.3390/f14122361
Macfarlane WW, Howell B, Logan JA, Smith AL, Rasmussen CC, Spangler RE. Climate Change-Driven Cumulative Mountain Pine Beetle-Caused Whitebark Pine Mortality in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. Forests. 2023; 14(12):2361. https://doi.org/10.3390/f14122361
Chicago/Turabian StyleMacfarlane, William W., Brian Howell, Jesse A. Logan, Ally L. Smith, Cashe C. Rasmussen, and Robert E. Spangler. 2023. "Climate Change-Driven Cumulative Mountain Pine Beetle-Caused Whitebark Pine Mortality in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem" Forests 14, no. 12: 2361. https://doi.org/10.3390/f14122361
APA StyleMacfarlane, W. W., Howell, B., Logan, J. A., Smith, A. L., Rasmussen, C. C., & Spangler, R. E. (2023). Climate Change-Driven Cumulative Mountain Pine Beetle-Caused Whitebark Pine Mortality in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. Forests, 14(12), 2361. https://doi.org/10.3390/f14122361