[Pollinator] Beetle 'Epidemic' Rends Northwest Forests

Ladadams@aol.com Ladadams at aol.com
Fri Mar 24 14:47:53 PST 2006


Beetle 'Epidemic' Rends Northwest Forests

March 24, 2006 — By Associated Press 
COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho — The region's largest infestation of mountain pine 
beetles in 20 years has hit more than a million acres of forests in northern Idaho 
and Montana, while 2.5 million acres in Washington face disease and insect 
problems. 

Recent flight surveys by the U.S. Forest Service and state forest management 
agencies found that years of drought have left forests in the Northwest 
vulnerable. 

The surveys found that 1.1 million acres of forest came under attack by 
mountain pine beetle in northern Idaho and Montana in 2005, an increase from the 
675,000 acres the year before. 

The Washington Department of Natural Resources reported that mountain pine 
beetles were at "epidemic" levels, with a 28 percent increase to 554,000 acres. 
Overall, insect and disease problems are present in 2.5 million of 
Washington's 21 million acres of forest, up from 1.9 million acres the previous year. 

Karen Ripley, an entomologist with the Washington Department of Natural 
Resources, said last year's abundant rain and this winter's good snowpack will 
reduce the stress on the region's forests. 

But she said it would take several years of normal moisture for forests to 
return to health. She said fire suppression combined with a lack of logging 
means nature will find a way to remove trees. 

"Nature's way is to have some of the beetles kill some of the trees," Ripley 
told The Spokesman-Review. "That relieves some of the competition. We've got a 
lot of stressed trees out there now, and they're easy pickings." 

In the Bitterroot Mountains along the Montana-Idaho border, the beetles have 
left orange patches of dead trees, said Tom Martin, a silviculturist with the 
Idaho Panhandle National Forest. 

He said the Forest Service wants to thin about 500 acres in the Upper St. Joe 
River area of Idaho to reduce the infestation. The agency, he said, has also 
spent $40,000 to protect lodgepole pine at the Lookout Pass Ski Area with 
pheromone treatments. The treatments fool beetles into thinking a tree has already 
been attacked. 

"What we're trying to do is weather the storm," said Martin. 

The survey found that populations of other bark beetles in the Idaho 
Panhandle National Forest were "much reduced." 

"Things can change rapidly, but the last couple of years we've gotten 
favorable moisture," Martin said. 

In the Colville National Forest in eastern Washington, fir engraver beetles 
appear to be increasing, infesting about 368,000 acres of forest in 2005. 
That's up 20 percent from the previous year. 

Douglas fir beetles have infested about 69,000 acres in eastern Washington, 
up from the 50,000 acres where they were found the previous year. 

Mountain pine beetles have also been a problem in British Columbia, where at 
least 20 million acres of forest have been killed. 

Officials there say warmer-than-average winters have led to the outbreak. 

------ 

Information from: The Spokesman-Review, http://www.spokesmanreview.com 

Source: Associated Press 


Laurie Davies Adams
Executive Director
Coevolution Institute
423 Washington St. 5th
San Francisco, CA 94111
415 362 1137
www.coevolution.org
www.nappc.org

Our future flies on the wings of pollinators.
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