Truffle production in old-growth and mature fir stands in northeastern California

1997 
Abstract Few studies have examined fruiting patterns of hypogeous fungi, and relationships between sporocarp production of hypogeous fungi and forest habitat components such as organic soil depth and amounts of decayed wood are poorly understood. We sampled sporocarps of hypogeous fungi (truffles) in four old-growth (>200 years) and four paired, mature (ca 100 years) fir ( Abies spp.) stands during four sample periods in 1993 and three sample periods in 1994 in the Lassen National Forest in northeastern California. Truffles were collected from 4-m 2 circular plots systematically located at 36 grid points per stand during each sample period. Habitat characteristics were measured in 50.3-m 2 circles centered at each grid point in 1993. We found a total of 46 truffle species in 30.4% of the 2016 total plots, and the total standing dry weight of truffles was equivalent to 2.43 kg ha −1 . Total frequency and biomass of truffles and number of truffle species did not differ significantly between stand types in 1993 or 1994, but species composition did. We found no significant associations between measures of total truffle abundance and measures of habitat structure and composition at the 0.25-ha grid scale or at the 50.3-m 2 habitat plot scale. At the scale of the 4-m 2 truffle plot, plots with decayed wood were more likely to have truffles than plots without decayed wood during the final sample period of each year, but the association was significant only in 1993. Mean organic soil depth was greater in plots with truffles than plots without truffles in each sample period in both years, but ranked values were only marginally significant in one sample period. Goodness-of-fit tests to the Poisson distribution indicated that individual truffles had clumped distributions, but we could not reject the null hypothesis of random distribution of truffle collections. Our results indicate that total truffle production had recovered from stand-replacement wildfire in the mature stands, and that total truffle abundance was not strongly associated with habitat characteristics within the range of habitat variation exhibited in these stands. Individual species, however, were associated with old-growth stands and others with mature stands.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    30
    References
    36
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []