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Evaluating the Likelihood of Tree Failure in Naples, Florida (United States) Following Hurricane Irma

Ryan W. Klein, Andrew K. Koeser, Brian Kane, Shawn Landry, Heather Shields, Stephen Lloyd, Gail Hansen

2020Forests21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Trees in residential landscapes provide many benefits, but can injure persons and damage property when they fail. In hurricane-prone regions like Florida, USA, the regular occurrence of hurricanes has provided an opportunity to assess factors that influence the likelihood of wind-induced tree failure and develop species failure profiles. We assessed open-grown trees in Naples, Florida, following the passage of Hurricane Irma in September 2017 to determine the effect of relevant factors on the degree of damage sustained by individual trees. Of 4034 assessed individuals (n = 15 species), 74% sustained no damage, 4% sustained only minor damage (i.e., minimal corrective pruning needed), 6% sustained significant damage (i.e., major corrective pruning needed), and 15% were whole-tree failures (i.e., overturned trees or trees requiring removal). The proportion of individuals in each damage category varied among species, stem diameter at 1.4 m above ground, and the presence of utility lines, which was a proxy for maintenance. We compared our results with the findings of seven previous hurricanes in the region to explore species’ resilience in hurricanes.

Topics & Concepts

PruningResilience (materials science)Proxy (statistics)Tree (set theory)Psychological resilienceGeographyForestryEnvironmental scienceBiologyStatisticsMathematicsPsychologyAgronomyPhysicsPsychotherapistThermodynamicsMathematical analysisTree Root and Stability StudiesPlant responses to water stressForest ecology and management
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