Bark
Beetles > Conifer Bark Beetle
Pest: Conifer Bark Beetle. Several genera, including: Dendroctonus,
Ips, Scolytus.
Order: Coleoptera
Family: Scolytidae
Host Plants:
In the Northeast, primarily pines (Pinus ) but also others,
such as fir (Abies ), spruce (Picea ), arborvitae
(Thuja ), others.
Description:
In the Northeast, the primary concern with conifer bark beetles
is associated mostly with weakened pines in the forest and landscape.
Stress factors that predispose a pine to bark beetle attack include
drought, insufficient roots at transplanting time and old age. Younger
and healthier pines produce ample amounts of resin necessary to
repel bark beetle attack. Weakened and wounded pines may also emit
plant volatiles into the air that act as a strong attractant for
the bark beetles. Most conifer bark beetle species are very small
(often 1-3 mm) with one of the largest being the black turpentine
beetle (Dendroctonus terebrans (Olivier) at about 5/8"
(8-10 mm) in length.
The Problem:
Many conifer bark beetle species overcome what is left of a
trees natural defenses by utilizing a strategy known as mass
attack. One or several beetles of the same species will find
a suitably weakened tree for colonization and then emit an aggregation
pheromone (a chemical message) that attracts countless numbers of
their species to that one tree. All of them then chew through the
trunk to the vascular area and cause pitch to flow out. Once the
pitch hardens sufficiently, they bore through this pitch glob into
the tree again and allow more pitch to flow from the same spot.
This process is repeated until the trees supply of resin is
exhausted. Hardened pitch globs, with a hole in the center, are
often very obvious on the trunk of a tree that has been severely
attacked and these are known as pitch tubes or pitch volcanoes.
Once the trees natural defenses are gone, the beetles can
then colonize that tree by the thousands and kill the host. Bark
beetles make unique galleries (tunnels) under the bark at the inner
bark / outer wood interface and lay eggs there. The larvae, upon
hatching, will feed in this narrow, nutrient-rich area and then
pupate and emerge as adults. A group of bark beetles known as Ambrosia
beetles are able to tunnel into the wood of the host and live in
this nutrient-poor environment by transporting specific fungal spores
on their bodies that grow within the galleries. These fungi stain
the wood, and along with the tunneling, can greatly reduce the harvest
value of timber. In the Northeast, one of the common and serious
bark beetles is the black turpentine beetle (Dendroctonus terebrans
(Olivier). This pest is primarily a problem in coastal areas on
Japanese black pine and pitch pine. Pitch pine is usually considered
to be tolerant of salt spray and harsh conditions but repeated hurricane-force
storms in the 1980s and 1990s, coupled with people pressures
on Cape Cod, has resulted in many of these trees being weakened
and attacked by this beetle. The Black turpentine beetle primarily
colonizes the host tree on the first 8 feet of trunk.
The Solutions:
Maintaining tree health is essential for preventing most bark
beetle attack. Watering during times of drought and, if possible,
heavily watering the soil around a tree and "washing"
the foliage after a serious storm that contained a lot of salt-spray,
to remove excess salt, may help to prevent added stresses. Some
chemical sprays may be utilized to reduce re-infestation but this
may require the repeated use of residual pesticides.
Images
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Close-up of an adult Black Turpentine Beetle. Actual size
is approximately 5/8".
This attack already weakened trees, usually in the bottom
8 feet of the trunk.
Their presence in a tree indicates serious prior stresses
and perhaps the
loss of the tree. (photo by: R.Childs)

Newly formed pitch tubes indicating a
fresh attack on a weak pitch pine.
(photo by: R. Childs)

An older pitch tube on the trunk of a
pitch pine. (photo by: R.Childs)

A natural stand of conifers in Utah displaying some dead trees
that were killed
by bark beetles. (photo by: R. Childs)

National Forest land in Idaho where
repeated droughts stressed lodge poles
pines and invited bark beetle attack.
The sign indicates that logging was not
a result
of tree loss here.
(photo by: R. Childs)

This National Forest land in Idaho was once covered with lodgepole
pines but
they wee killed by bark beetles after repeated droughts. It
is now replanted
with the same species but careful management helps prevent
future bark
beetle outbreaks. (photo by: R. Childs)

One, of several recently transplanted pines, was killed by
bark beetle attack. Dug
from elsewhere on the property and moved to this site, the
affected tree did
not have a sufficient root mass to establish itself and fend
off attack by bark
beetles, while the others did. (photo by: R. Childs)
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Bark
Beetles index:
Conifer Bark Beetle
Elm Bark Beetle
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