Biological Factors

Authored By: D. N. Wear, J. Greis

Primary Question (chapter 17): How have biological agents including insects and disease-causing organisms influenced the overall health of the South’s forests, and how will they likely affect it in the future?

Related Question (chapter 3): What are the likely effects of expanding human populations, urbanization, and infrastructure development on wildlife and their habitats?

Ecological systems are often restructured from within. For example, natural succession favors the replacement of pioneer species with shade-tolerant species. Insect populations can shift from endemic to epidemic status and quickly kill a substantial share of overstory trees. Plant diseases reduce vigor or cause localized mortality and selectively remove certain plant species from the forest. Regeneration and growth that follow mortality can change the species composition of the subsequent forest.

While pathogens, insects, and mortality are natural components of forested ecosystems, land use and management can alter their effects. Introduced exotic species, which are prevalent in the South, can completely displace native plant and animal species, thereby restructuring forest ecosystems. Cultivating tree species beyond their natural range and altering forest composition can predispose forests to insect and disease outbreaks. Conversely, management strategies and direct intervention can mitigate the spread of and damage caused by these outbreaks.

The Assessment evaluated the dynamics of several biological agents that have had or will likely have a substantial impact on forest ecosystems or the values that people derive from them (chapter 17). We found that:

 

Encyclopedia ID: p2722