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Dive into the research topics where Kevin R. Kosola is active.

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Featured researches published by Kevin R. Kosola.


Oecologia | 2001

Repeated insect defoliation effects on growth, nitrogen acquisition, carbohydrates, and root demography of poplars

Kevin R. Kosola; Donald I. Dickmann; Eldor A. Paul; Dylan Parry

Large-scale outbreaks of defoliating insects are common in temperate forests. The effects of defoliation on tree physiology are expected to cascade through the entire forest ecosystem, altering carbon, nitrogen, and water fluxes, and subsequently affecting nitrogen cycling and plant-herbivore interactions. If these post-defoliation changes are largely driven by N deficiency, tree root system responses to defoliation should be central to regulating the long-term effects of defoliation; N fertilization should reverse the effects. We examined these phenomena in a 3-year large-scale replicated manipulative field experiment in a hybrid poplar plantation, where we regulated defoliation by gypsy moths as well as nitrogen availability. To our knowledge, this is the first manipulative field experiment at this scale to examine the effects of severe insect defoliation on whole-tree physiology. Defoliation decreased tree growth and increased the rate of top dieback in the stand. Defoliation led to transient declines in carbon allocation to starch in fine roots, trunk, and twigs in the year of heaviest defoliation. Root production and root mortality were unaffected by the heaviest defoliation, but nitrate and ammonium uptake were strongly depressed. N fertilization increased tree growth, but did not alter defoliation effects on starch accumulation or top dieback. Defoliation and fertilization treatments did not interact. In this system, defoliation effects on tree recovery of leaf nitrogen lost to herbivory were primarily driven by effects on nitrogen uptake, rather than effects on root production or mortality.


Oecologia | 1999

Resource competition and suppression of plants colonizing early successional old fields

Kevin R. Kosola; Katherine L. Gross

Abstract Early colonizing annual plants are rapidly suppressed in secondary succession on fertile midwestern old fields, while later colonizing perennials persist. Differences in competitive ability for above- and belowground resources may be partly responsible for differences in species persistence during succession, as both light and nutrient availability may change rapidly. We found that, although both above- and belowground competition suppress growth of colonizing plants, belowground competition was the dominant factor in the suppression of the annual Ambrosia artemisiifolia in 2nd-year-old fields near the W.K. Kellogg Biological Station in southwestern Michigan. Despite an ability to persist in later successional fields, seedling transplants of the perennial Achillea millefolium were also suppressed by above- and belowground competition, with belowground competition having the strongest effect. As in many old fields, nitrogen availability is the primary factor limiting plant productivity. There was no clear difference between the species in ability to compete for 15N from an enriched patch, although there was an indication of greater precision of foraging by Achillea. Life history differences between these species and consequent differences in the phenology of root growth relative to other old-field plants are likely to play a large role in the persistence of Achillea in successional fields where Ambrosia is suppressed.


Biogeochemistry | 2004

Nitrogen cycling in poplar stands defoliated by insects

C.A. Russell; Kevin R. Kosola; Eldor A. Paul; G. P. Robertson

Large-scale outbreaks of defoliating insects are common in temperate forests. These outbreaks are thought to be responsible for substantial cycling of nitrogen (N), and its loss from the system. Gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar) populations within poplar plots were manipulated over 2 years so that the ecosystem-wide consequences of catastrophic defoliation on N cycling could be examined. The quantities of N in leaf litter-fall, ammonia volatilization and soil N pools were estimated across the two seasons. Defoliated leaf biomass was estimated from experimentally derived approximate digestibility factors and added to the mass of senesced leaf to determine total annual leaf production. Throughout the growing season the defoliation treatment peaked at about 40% in year 1 and 100% in year 2. Rapid regrowth after defoliation meant that only 45% of the annual leaf biomass was consumed in the defoliation treatment in year 2, while control plots suffered about 20% consumption each year. In each year, defoliated plots produced 20% more leaf biomass and N than the controls, a phenomenon attributed to compensatory photosynthesis. No substantial losses of N via ammonia volatilization, nitrous oxide emission or nitrate leaching were observed. Neither was there any sustained or substantial gain in the soils microbial biomass or inorganic N pools. These observations suggest that the defoliated poplars were able to compete with soil microbes and N loss mechanisms for soil N as it became available, thereby ameliorating the effects of defoliation on soil nitrogen cycling. We conclude from this study that the N mineralized from defoliation residues was conserved in this plantation ecosystem.


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 1999

Root age and phosphorus effects on colonization of Andropogon gerardii by mycorrhizal fungi

Adonia Henry; Kevin R. Kosola

Abstract We examined the effects of plant age and root age on mycorrhizal colonization in the obligate mycotrophic grass Andropogon gerardii grown at high and low rates of soil phosphorus availability. There were significant interactions between soil P availability, plant age, root age and mycorrhizal colonization. Mycorrhizal colonization of 1-week-old roots increased with plant age, but was not significantly affected by soil P availability. Colonization of roots increased significantly with increasing root age only in the low-P treatment. Although the high-P treatment increased rates of root extension for some root age classes, there were not consistently lower rates of colonization in these roots. Studies of P acquisition by A. gerardii and other mycotrophic plants should take these interacting factors into account, especially when examining exploitation of nutrient-enriched patches.


Tree Physiology | 2002

Carbohydrates in individual poplar fine roots: effects of root age and defoliation.

Kevin R. Kosola; Donald I. Dickmann; Dylan Parry


Tree Physiology | 2006

Responses of condensed tannins in poplar roots to fertilization and gypsy moth defoliation

Kevin R. Kosola; Dylan Parry; Beth Ann A. Workmaster


Tree Physiology | 2004

Cottonwood growth rate and fine root condensed tannin concentration

Kevin R. Kosola; Donald I. Dickmann; Richard B. Hall; Beth Ann A. Workmaster


Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science | 2007

Mycorrhizal Colonization of Cranberry: Effects of Cultivar, Soil Type, and Leaf Litter Composition

Kevin R. Kosola; Beth Ann A. Workmaster


Hortscience | 2005

'Ben Lear' and 'Stevens' Cranberry Root and Shoot Growth Response to Soil Water Potential

Dana L. Baumann; Beth Ann A. Workmaster; Kevin R. Kosola


Agronomy Journal | 1999

Laparascopic sampling of roots of known age from an expandable-wall minirhizotron system

Kevin R. Kosola

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Beth Ann A. Workmaster

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Dylan Parry

State University of New York System

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Eldor A. Paul

Colorado State University

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C.A. Russell

Michigan State University

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G. P. Robertson

Michigan State University

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James S. Busse

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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