The Frequency, Magnitude, and Spatial Distribution of Heart Rot in Dominant Temperate Tree Species in a Forest Dynamics Plot
Hunter Gonzalez, Ally O'Neill, Michael Parent, Debit Datta, Nathan G. Swenson

TL;DR
This study shows that heart rot is common in large trees in a temperate forest and is clustered due to tree damage, not soil moisture.
Contribution
The first spatially explicit study of heart rot in a natural forest tree community.
Findings
71% of large trees in the study show some degree of heart rot.
Heart rot is spatially clustered, likely due to tree damage rather than soil moisture.
One species showed a significantly higher magnitude of heart rot in infected individuals.
Abstract
The composition, dynamics, and health of forest tree communities are governed by interactions with the abiotic and biotic environment. Fungi are critical biotic interactors that play an increasingly appreciated role in forest tree health, particularly with respect to mycorrhizal and pathogenic fungi. Heart rot fungi, while known to infect a large fraction of the individuals in managed stands, have been considerably understudied in tree community ecology. Heart rot has been predicted to form hotspots in the forest due to crown or bole damage and/or soil moisture gradients and is expected to vary across species due to life‐history differences. To address this knowledge gap, we quantified the incidence, magnitude, and spatial distribution of heart rot in 328 individual trees with diameters greater than or equal to 10 cm across the six most dominant tree species in a mixed broadleaf…
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Taxonomy
TopicsForest Ecology and Biodiversity Studies · Forest ecology and management · Forest Insect Ecology and Management
