![]() |
Spruce Beetle in the Yukon
Spruce beetle Dendroctonus rufipennis, is the most destructive pest of mature spruce in western North America. In the Yukon, spruce beetles can be found in stands throughout the range of white spruce, Picea glauca. The beetle normally has a two-year life cycle but it can vary from one to three years depending upon elevation, aspect and local climatic conditions. Infestations historically have lasted up to four years before collapsing, due to a combination of climatic stresses, predation and host resistance. A notable exception to this is the recent infestation in the southwest Yukon, which, in 2005 is in its 15th year, due to ongoing stress caused by climate moderation.
History of Yukon Manifestations
Beetles emerge from the trees in late May/early June and fly up to four km in search of a suitable host. When populations are high, their search criteria expand to include healthy green trees. Attack densities usually range between 40 and 80 beetles per square metre of stem surface at breast height on standing trees. When a female selects a tree, she lands on the bark and releases a pheromone to attract other females and initiate the mass attack necessary to overcome the tree’s defenses. Another pheromone attracts a male and, after mating, the female commences to bore a vertical tunnel (adult gallery) under the bark at the interface of the cambium layer and the sapwood, etching the sapwood in the process. In response to this irritant, healthy trees flood the beetle galleries with resin in an attempt to seal the wound and flush the beetles from the tree. When the tree is successful, and the beetles are pitched out, they can often be found entombed within the pitch nodule that forms on the outer bark at the entry hole. Stressed trees however, have limited energy reserves and produce little or no pitch. Successful beetles bore upward an average of 13 cm within the cambium, laying clusters of eggs on alternating sides of the gallery. After about 10 days, the eggs hatch, and the larvae commence feeding within the phloem. As the larvae feed they radiate laterally around the tree, interrupting the flow of nutrients. When overlapping larval galleries completely encircle the stem, the tree dies. In its evolutionary past, the beetle developed a mutually beneficial relationship with a fungus, Ceratocystis sp., which it carries from tree to tree in special receptacles called mycangia. Once introduced the fungal mycelium grows within the phloem, aiding the beetle to overcome tree resistance and causing the characteristic blue stain in the sapwood. Larvae pass through four distinct growth stages (instars) before they mature. In the normal two-year cycle they enter the first winter in an early instar, protected from all but the most severe winter cold by glycol (anti-freeze) which they manufacture within their cells. Development is completed during the next growing season and they enter the second winter as immature adults. In response to cool fall temperatures however, the young beetles bore out of the tree and crawl to the root collar where they re-enter. There they are protected from severe cold by the insulating snow. Adults emerge in late May or early June of the following year to repeat the cycle.
CLIMATIC: Temperatures of -40° C for a week or more will kill most larvae above the snow line. Larval mortality also occurs with the early onset of cold before the progeny have fully "hardened off" with glycol. WOODPECKERS: Woodpeckers can significantly reduce beetle populations during outbreaks. They can also be instrumental in controlling populations during an incipient outbreak by targeting scattered infested trees. INSECT PARASITES AND PREDATORS: Though always present, parasites and predators have little effect when beetle populations are high. Like woodpeckers they have a more important role in managing low populations. LOGGING: Sanitation logging is the most common method of managed beetle population control, through the harvest and speedy processing of infested timber. TRAP TREES: Conventional trap trees are green trees felled in the winter or spring to attract beetle populations. Following the beetle flight these trees are removed and milled to kill the broods. Lethal trap trees are treated with a systemic insecticide such as monosodium methane arsenate (MSMA) before felling. Both methods are most effective in the control of small outbreaks and absorbing populations arising from right-of-way clearing and logging slash.
|