We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
Assessing the Threat Posed by Indigenous Exotics: A Case Study of Two North American Bark Beetle Species.
- Authors
DODDS, KEVIN J.; GILMORE, DANIEL W.; SEYBOLD, STEVEN J.
- Abstract
The Douglas-fir beetle, Dendroctonus pseudotsugae Hopkins, was detected in 2001 in northern Minnesota outside its natural range and the range of its native hosts, Douglas-fir, Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirbel) Franco, and western larch, Larix occidentalis Nutt. Consecutive years of detection indicated that D. pseudotsugae may have been established in a new environment and provided a possible example of an indigenous exotic species in North America. Pheromone-baited logs of P. menziesii and tamarack, Larix laricina (Du Roi) K. Koch, were placed at four sites in northern Minnesota in an attempt to detect this indigenous exotic. Bark was removed from one half of logs and checked for D. pseudotsugae galleries. The remaining logs were left intact and reared to collect adult beetles the following spring. No D. pseudotsugae galleries were identified and no adults of the indigenous exotic were located. Along with the eastern larch beetle, Dendroctonus simplex LeConte, native Minnesota populations of Polygraphus rufipennis (Kirby) and Dryocoetes autographus (Ratzeburg) colonized P. menziesii logs. The reciprocal study was conducted in Montana, primarily to determine whether D. pseudotsugae would attack pheromone-baited logs of L. laricina. Logs from the Minnesota and Montana experiments were used to estimate the success of D. simplex and D. pseudotsugae in the non-native hosts P. menziesii and L. laricina, respectively. Both D. simplex and D. pseudotsugae successfully colonized and reproduced in non-native logs in the field, albeit at low numbers. The potential threat of indigenous exotic species to North American forests also is discussed.
- Subjects
NORTH America; DOUGLAS fir beetle; BARK beetles; INTRODUCED insects
- Publication
Annals of the Entomological Society of America, 2010, Vol 103, Issue 1, p39
- ISSN
0013-8746
- Publication type
Case Study
- DOI
10.1603/008.103.0106