Growth of ponderosa pines with visible symptoms of ozone injury was compared with that of asymptomatic trees in the southern Sierra Nevada, California. Time series analysis indicated that there was no significant reduction in annual radial increment of symptomatic trees during recent years compared to past growth and growth of asymptomatic trees. First order autocorrelation and climatic variables accounted for a large proportion of the variance in growth Index, and winter precipitation was positively correlated with growth for all size and age classes. Although ozone concentrations are high enough to cause chlorosis and premature needle senescence In ponderosa pine, there has been no significant change in growth associated with ozone injury. © 1988 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
CITATION STYLE
Peterson, D. L., & Arbaugh, M. J. (1988). An evaluation of the effects of ozone injury on radial growth of ponderosa pine (pirns ponderosa) in the Southern Sierra Nevada. Journal of the Air Pollution Control Association, 38(7), 921–927. https://doi.org/10.1080/08940630.1988.10466434
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