Publication | Open Access
Comparison of Hurricane Damage to Several Species of Urban Trees in San Juan, Puerto Rico
38
Citations
13
References
2000
Year
Stem FailureEngineeringBotanyPuerto RicoHurricane DamageForestryUrban VegetationSocial SciencesSilvicultureSan JuanUrban CanopyForest HealthUrban ForestryGeographyWeather DisasterUrban EcologyForest Health MonitoringDeforestationAbstract Percent DefoliationDroughtCivil EngineeringTree GrowthWood-specific Gravity
Abstract Percent defoliation and percent crown loss were estimated, and a count of stem failure was taken for 24 species of urban trees in San Juan following Hurricane Georges. Differences among species were significant, and detailed comparisons are presented. Wood-specific gravity, branch resistance to flexing, and leaf retention strength were measured for the study species. Many significant correlations were noted between pre-storm height, diameter, wood-specific gravity, branch resistance to flexing, leaf retention strength, defoliation, percent crown loss, and stem failure. A regression equation predicting defoliation is presented. Tree height was the most influential variable followed by branch resistance to flexing, leaf retention strength, and wood-specific gravity. If tree height was eliminated from the model, specific gravity then entered the stepwise regression first.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1