BULLETIN 490, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. 



site on which the trees were located. The amount of butt-rot (prob- 

 ably caused b} r Polyponts schwemU&ii) present on the areas ex- 

 amined was so small that it was not included in the table. This ex- 

 plains any apparent discrepancy between the sum of the sound and 

 defective trees and the total number of trees listed in the table. 



Table I. — Data on sound and defective felled trees of black jack and yellow pine. 



Area. 



Kind of timber. 



Num- 

 ber of 

 trees. 



Sound trees. 



Defective trees 

 (western red- 

 rot). 



Remarks. 





Num- 

 ber. 



Per 



cent. 



Num- 

 ber. 



Per 

 cent. 







/Blackjack 



210 

 20 



294 

 84 



126 

 132 



206 

 76 



855 

 235 



124 

 16 



206 

 18 



293 

 73 



124 

 87 



193 

 57 



S.36 

 223 



123 

 13 



98 

 90 



99.66 

 86.9 



98.4 

 65.9 



93.7 

 75 



97.7 

 94.9 



99.2 



81.25 



4 

 2 





 10 



2 



40 



9 

 14 



14 



8 





 3 



1.9 11 Top of ridge: growth conditions fair, 

 10 ,/ mainly blackjack. 



'(Lower portion of southeast slopes 



l 



\Yellow pine 



fBlackjack 





\Yellowpine 



" i i i q '"■{ an d De d of canyon; growth con- 

 11 - M il ditionsfair. 

 , „ ! (South and southeast slopes; thin 



3 



(Yellow pine 



30. 3 

 4.3 



< sou: slopes steep, rocKy; growtii 

 1 conditions poor. 

 South and east slopes; thin soil; 



4 



\Yellow pine 



/Blackjack 



18.4 



1.6 

 3.4 



18.75 



< slopes steep; growth conditions 

 ( poor. 



lMesas; soil good; growth conditions 

 / good. 



114-aere sample strip across mesa; 

 J growth conditions fair. 



5 



\Yellow pine 



/Blackjack 



6 



\ Yellow pine 



fBlackjack 



1 Yellow pine 



{ Both kinds — 



1-6 



1,815 

 563 



1,775 

 471 



97.8 

 83.6 



29 



77 



1.59 

 13.6 



VTotalfor all areas. 





2, 378 



2,246 



94.4 



106 



4.5 



J 



DISCUSSION OF THE DATA PRESENTED IN TABLE I. 



A study of Table I shows several interesting facts: (1) There is a 

 marked difference in the percentage of black jack and of yellow pine 

 affected by western red-rot. (2) The site seems to have a decided 

 influence on the occurrence of this rot, especially in the yellow pine. 

 (3) The variation in the percentage of western red-rot on the dif- 

 ferent areas shown in the table is due to several factors, the three most 

 prominent ones being the relative proportion of black jack and yellow 

 pine which had been cut on each area, the influence of the site on the 

 growth of the trees, and the age of the timber. For instance, on area 

 Xo. 3 the percentage of this rot in yellow pine is high, due apparently 

 to unfavorable growth conditions and the age of the timber cut. 



Table I should give a fairly accurate idea of the occurrence of west- 

 ern red-rot in black jack of merchantable size in this region, since 

 1,855 trees of this kind were examined over areas where 30 to 50 per 

 cent of the black jack 11 inches, d. b. h., and over had been cut. 

 As an indication of the amount of this rot present in the yellow pine, 

 Table I is not so conclusive, since, with the exception of areas 3 and 

 4, all of the yellow pine shown in the table was of small diameter (12 

 to 18 inches, d. b. h.) and was cut for hewn ties only. This means 

 that the percentage of trees showing western red-rot in the yellow 

 pine on these areas will be greater than is shown in the table, except 



