Barbara C. Reynolds
University of North Carolina at Asheville
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Featured researches published by Barbara C. Reynolds.
Journal of Environmental Quality | 2012
Jennifer D. Knoepp; James M. Vose; Jerry L. Michael; Barbara C. Reynolds
Imidacloprid is a systemic insecticide effective in controlling the exotic pest (hemlock woolly adelgid) in eastern hemlock () trees. Concerns over imidacloprid impacts on nontarget species have limited its application in southern Appalachian ecosystems. We quantified the movement and adsorption of imidacloprid in forest soils after soil injection in two sites at Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory in western North Carolina. Soils differed in profile depth, total carbon and nitrogen content, and effective cation exchange capacity. We injected imidacloprid 5 cm into mineral soil, 1.5 m from infested trees, using a Kioritz soil injector. We tracked the horizontal and vertical movement of imidacloprid by collecting soil solution and soil samples at 1 m, 2 m, and at the drip line from each tree periodically for 1 yr. Soil solution was collected 20 cm below the surface and just above the saprolite, and acetonitrile-extractable imidacloprid was determined through the profile. Soil solution and extractable imidacloprid concentrations were determined by high-performance liquid chromatography. Soil solution and extractable imidacloprid concentrations were greater in the site with greater soil organic matter. Imidacloprid moved vertically and horizontally in both sites; concentrations generally declined downward in the soil profile, but preferential flow paths allowed rapid vertical movement. Horizontal movement was limited, and imidacloprid did not move to the tree drip line. We found a negative relationship between adsorbed imidacloprid concentrations and soil microarthropod populations largely in the low-organic-matter site; however, population counts were similar to other studies at Coweeta.
Journal of Insect Science | 2016
Ashley E. Case; Albert E. Mayfield; Stacy L. Clark; Scott E. Schlarbaum; Barbara C. Reynolds
The Asiatic oak weevil, Cyrtepistomus castaneus Roelofs (Coleoptera: Curculionidae), is a nonnative defoliator of trees in the Fagaceae family in the United States but has not been studied on Castanea species in the southern Appalachian Mountains. Planted trees of Castanea dentata (Marsh.) Borkh. (Fagales: Fagaceae), Castanea mollissima Blume (Fagales: Fagaceae), and four hybrid breeding generations were evaluated in 2012 for insect defoliation and C. castaneus abundance and frequency. Defoliation was visually assessed throughout the growing season at two sites in the southern Appalachian Mountains (western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee). C. castaneus abundance and frequency were monitored on trees using beat sheets and emergence was recorded from ground traps. Asiatic oak weevils were more abundant and more frequently collected on American chestnut (Ca. dentata) and its most closely related BC3F3 hybrid generation than on the Asian species Ca. mollissima. In most months, C. castaneus colonization of hybrid generations was not significantly different than colonization of parental species. Frequency data for C. castaneus suggested that adults were distributed relatively evenly throughout the study sites rather than in dense clusters. Emergence of C. castaneus was significantly higher under a canopy dominated by Quercus species than under non-Quercus species or open sky. C. castaneus emergence began in May and peaked in late June and early July. These results may be useful for resource managers trying to restore blight-resistant chestnut to the Southern Appalachians while minimizing herbivory by insect pests.
Forest Canopies 1998: Global perspectives. Proceedings of the Second International Canopy Conference, Part IV, Sarasota, Florida, USA, 4-8 November 1998. | 2000
Barbara C. Reynolds; Mark D. Hunter; D.A. Crossely
Forest Ecology and Management | 2005
Jennifer D. Knoepp; Barbara C. Reynolds; D.A. Crossley; Wayne T. Swank
Forest Ecology and Management | 2015
Albert E. Mayfield; Barbara C. Reynolds; Carla Coots; Nathan P. Havill; Cavell Brownie; Andrew R. Tait; James L. Hanula; Shimat V. Joseph; Ashley B. Galloway
Canadian Journal of Forest Research | 2010
Barton D. Clinton; James M. Vose; Jennifer D. Knoepp; Katherine J. Elliott; Barbara C. Reynolds; Stanley J. Zarnoch
Pedobiologia | 2007
Barbara C. Reynolds; Jennifer Hamel; Jason Isbanioly; Leonardo Klausman; Kevin K. Moorhead
Forest Canopies (Second Edition) | 2004
Barbara C. Reynolds; Mark D. Hunter
Archive | 2012
Mark D. Hunter; Barbara C. Reynolds; Myra C. Hall; Christopher J. Frost
Gen. Tech. Rep. SRS–120. Asheville, NC: U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service, Southern Research Station. 8 p. | 2010
Chelcy R. Ford; Barbara C. Reynolds; James M. Vose