Insect Destruction of Forests Rises Threefold

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Insect Destruction of Forests Rises Threefold
Bugs a growing threat to forests, US reports
37 million acres killed over 5 years — 25 million more than previous 5 years
The Associated Press, July 6, 2011

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. — Marauding insects have become a leading threat to the nation's forests over the past decade, a problem made worse by drought and a warming climate, a federal report says.

Bark beetles, engraver beetles and gypsy moths are the primary culprits behind a threefold increase in forestland mortality caused by insect attacks between 2003 and 2007, according to a U.S. Forest Service report obtained by The Associated Press.

The volume of forests in the lower 48 states killed by bugs totaled 37 million acres during the period, up from 12 million during the previous five years. Millions of additional acres have perished since.

When defoliated trees are added to those killed outright, the acreage significantly damaged by insects since 2003 totals about 50 million — 8 percent of forest area in the lower 48 states, the report says. The victims range from Rocky Mountain pine forests hammered by bark beetles to ash stands in Northeastern and Upper Midwestern states, where authorities have struggled to contain an emerald ash borer invasion.

By comparison, about 13 million acres were scorched by fires during the same period, less than 2 percent of all forest acreage.
Other dangers include overdevelopment, pollution and storm damage. Still, the nation's 751 million acres of forestland have remained "remarkably stable" over the past half-century, says the federal agency's first comprehensive report card on their health in eight years.

"Forests are incredibly resilient, and from an ecological point of view this is how they regenerate," said Rob Mangold, the agency's director of forest health protection. "They go through this cycle of death to produce a new forest. You have to look at things in the long term, although locally there are some really big impacts."

Drought early in the reporting period weakened many Western trees, making them more vulnerable to beetle attack, said Richard Guldin of the Forest Service's research and development arm. Milder winters have boosted the beetles' survival rates and numbers.
"We get enormous numbers of beetles that overwhelm even healthy trees," Mangold said.

Aerial surveys indicate a drop-off in beetle depredation in some parts of the West over the past couple of years, he said. While it's too early to say whether that represents a trend, previous infestations have risen and fallen over time.

The Southern pine beetle killed nearly 28 million loblolly pines in the mid-1980s, but the total dropped to a few million two decades later as the number of host trees declined. Spruce budworm epidemics have broken out in 30- to 50-year cycles, as sections of forest died and regrew.

While little can be done to prevent periodic attacks by native insects, officials say people can help prevent the spread of foreign invaders such as the emerald ash borer and Asian longhorned beetle by refraining from moving firewood. The ash borer has killed tens of millions of trees in the Northeast and Upper Midwest.

"It's a terribly difficult insect and there's still a big effort to figure out the best way to contain it, but we know that firewood is the primary means of spreading that pest," said Mike Philip, pest survey program manager with the Michigan Department of Agriculture.

Fires increased in number and intensity during the period covered by the report. They burned nearly 40 million acres of all land types between 2003 and 2007, up from 25 million during the previous five years. Of the acreage burned from 2003-07, about 13 million were forests.
About 1.7 million acres died from drought and other weather-related events, up from 788,000 acres during the preceding five years.

Although overall acreage has changed little over the past 50 years, the nation's forests also are being weakened by fragmentation from urban and recreational development, which is increasing by about 1.6 percent annually, the report said. Many paper and wood products companies have sold large tracts previously managed for logging and conservation.

"Our nation's trees and forests are the very lifeblood for the clean air and water we all take for granted in this country," Forest Service chief Tom Tidwell said.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Bugs a growing threat to US forests - US news - Environment - msnbc.com
 
HOLY MOTHER OF GOD.

Laughing my balls off...........again. Do you credit these k00ks? An obsession with hysterical. Now its the attack of the bugs to prove we're going off a cliff!!



Giant-Bugs.jpg




Is this the new stunt? Trying to convince people that bugs didnt exist until very recently?:up:
 
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But they are part of the "fragile eco-system" so we have to just let them destroy everything. Can't interfere at all.
 
The plant kingdom will survive.

Change is inevitable.

Could be a real bitch for us, though.
 
But they are part of the "fragile eco-system" so we have to just let them destroy everything. Can't interfere at all.

Why do you post, if you just don't get it?!?! :cuckoo:
The article states that insects are a threat. Not true. Only man is a threat to this earth's "fragile eco-system". If the insects destroy everything then it must be Mother Earths way of bringing back balance.
 
Introduced species are the problem. Hey, why not spray poison around? At least put the greenies to work hand picking harmful insects.
 
Automatic kneejerk reaction of the new 'Conservative' to any observation that threatons his alternative universe view of the "Way things oughta be". They just cannot stand them thar pointy headed scientists pointing out that there are consequences to actions taken, or not taken.
 
But they are part of the "fragile eco-system" so we have to just let them destroy everything. Can't interfere at all.

Why do you post, if you just don't get it?!?! :cuckoo:
The article states that insects are a threat. Not true. Only man is a threat to this earth's "fragile eco-system". If the insects destroy everything then it must be Mother Earths way of bringing back balance.

You still don't get it!!! I guess we have to make it simple for those who get their environmental info from political rather than scientific sources. MORE HEAT, MORE INSECTS. Plain enough for you? :cool:
 
Nope, Konrad. After all, they will simply point out that there are no insects living in their furnaces. That's the level their minds operate on.
 
You want science?

Could be because of more homogeneity in the composition of forests. Makes predation easier.

Could be because of balances in the food chain. Less bug predators.

Could be because of forest management practices that leave dead and diseased trees in the forest, rather than managing them.

But NOOOOOO -- we've GOT to leap to the conclusion that the bugs have noticed that 0.3degC rise since 2002 and that is the SOLE EXPLANATION for this event..

Sheeezzz -- talk about elephant repellent.
 
You want science?

Could be because of more homogeneity in the composition of forests. Makes predation easier.

Could be because of balances in the food chain. Less bug predators.

Could be because of forest management practices that leave dead and diseased trees in the forest, rather than managing them.

But NOOOOOO -- we've GOT to leap to the conclusion that the bugs have noticed that 0.3degC rise since 2002 and that is the SOLE EXPLANATION for this event..

Sheeezzz -- talk about elephant repellent.

Of course you could be right, but what changed the composition of the forest to allow the predators easlier exist then before? Less food could also equal warming too. Works both ways, but your right it could be something else. 3# is part of it. The fact that we don't allow fires to burn down every few years.
 
There are a number of causes of the present insect infestions in the forests of North America. From the Southwest to the northern forests of Canada and Alaska, we are seeing major insect infestations. In some forests, one of the causes is the lack of seasonal ground fires. However, even in those forests in Canada and Alaska, where, unless human habitations are present, there is no fire control efforts, we are still seeing the increasing infestations.

Part of the problem is that the winters are ending early, but the migrations of the birds that help control the insects remain on the same schedule. So the insects are already established under the bark before the birds arrive.

Another problem is the numbers of the birds themselves. Many suffer loss of habitat from human settlement in areas that they previously wintered in. Then there is the use of insecticides that not only kill the insects, but also negatively affect the birds.

In areas of the world where the coal plants still emit a great deal of sulphates, acid rain from the generation plants are weakoning the trees defenses against insects.

The net result is that we have many dead trees in the forests, and the forest are now far more vulneble to crown fires.
 
We got a buggly problem...
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Spread by Trade and Climate, Bugs Butcher America's Forests
December 07, 2016 — In a towering forest of centuries-old eastern hemlocks, it's easy to miss one of the tree's nemeses. No larger than a speck of pepper, the Hemlock woolly adelgid spends its life on the underside of needles sucking sap, eventually killing the tree.
The bug is one in an expanding army of insects draining the life out of forests from New England to the West Coast. Aided by global trade, a warming climate and drought-weakened trees, the invaders have become one of the greatest threats to biodiversity in the United States. Scientists say they already are driving some tree species toward extinction and are causing billions of dollars a year in damage — and the situation is expected to worsen. “They are one of the few things that can actually eliminate a forest tree species in pretty short order — within years,'' said Harvard University ecologist David Orwig as he walked past dead hemlocks scattered across the university's 5.8-square-mile research forest in Petersham.

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A dead hemlock tree is seen at Harvard University's research forest in Petersham, Massachusetts​

This scourge is projected to put 63 percent of the country's forest at risk through 2027 and carries a cost of several billion dollars annually in dead tree removal, declining property values and timber industry losses, according to a peer-reviewed study this year in Ecological Applications. That examination, by more than a dozen experts, found that hundreds of pests have invaded the nation's forests, and that the emerald ash borer alone has the potential to cause $12.7 billion in damage by 2020.

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The preserved remains of an Asian longhorned beetle, found in Worcester, Massachusetts​

Threat of globalization

Insect pests, some native and others from as far away as Asia, can undermine forest ecosystems. For example, scientists say, several species of hemlock and almost 20 species of ash could nearly go extinct in the coming decades. Such destruction would do away with a critical sponge to capture greenhouse gas emissions, shelter for birds and insects, and food sources for bears and other animals. Dead forests also can increase the danger of catastrophic wildfires. Today's connected world enables foreign invaders to cross oceans in packing materials or on garden plants, and then reach American forests. Once here, they have rapidly expanded their ranges.

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The larvae of the emerald ash borer devastate trees across the U.S.​

While all 50 states have been attacked by pests, experts say forests in the Northeast, California, Colorado and parts of the Midwest, North Carolina and Florida are especially at risk. Forests in some states, like New York, are close to major trade routes, while others, like in Florida, house trees especially susceptible to pests. Others, like New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Maine, are experiencing record warming. “The primary driver of the invasive pest problem is globalization, which includes increased trade and travel,” Andrew Liebhold, a Forest Service research entomologist in West Virginia. “But there are cases where climate change can play an important role. As climates warm, species are able to survive and thrive in more northerly areas.”

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