Dartmouth research offers new control strategies for bipolar bark beetles
Matt Ayres |
Population
explosions of pine beetles, which have been decimating North American forests
in recent decades, may be prevented by boosting competitor and predator beetle
populations, a Dartmouth study suggests. Bark beetles are the most destructive
forest pests worldwide. Management and climate change have resulted in younger,
denser forests that are even more susceptible to attack. Though intensively
studied for decades, until now an understanding of bark beetle population
dynamics -- extreme ups and downs -- has remained elusive.
The Dartmouth-led study, published in the January issue of the
journalPopulation
Ecology, confirmed, for the first time, that the abundance of a certain
animal species -- in this case the southern pine beetle -- fluctuates innately
between extremes, with no middle ground.
"That
is different from most species, such as deer, warblers and swallowtail
butterflies, whose populations tend to be regular around some average abundance
based on food, weather, and other external factors," says Matt Ayres, a
professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at Dartmouth and senior
author on the paper. "They don't appear and disappear in cycles. Rather,
they exist in two stable equilibrium states -- one of high abundance and the
other of scarcity." Once the population pendulum swings toward the high
end, it won't quickly or easily swing back.
The new
research by Dartmouth scientists and their forester colleagues could provide
the means to limit this seemingly bipolar dynamic, keeping the bark beetles at
the lower stable population level.
The
studies identify the presence of bark beetle competitors and predators
(specifically two other beetles) as the predominant limiting factor that can
keep the bark beetles at a low, stable equilibrium. The authors suggest that
the presence of these competitors and predators could be encouraged as a
control strategy.
"The
pine beetles produce pheromones, chemical signals, that attract enough
competitors and predators to prevent outbreaks," says Sharon Martinson, a
member of the research team and first author on the new paper. "Leaving
more dead trees in forests can provide habitat for competitor beetles that
rarely kill tree, and for predators that eat both beetle species."
The
authors suggest that other pest species with catastrophic impacts may also have
natural dynamics that include a tipping point between the bipolar population
states. By learning what factors control those tipping points, impacts on
ecosystems can be averted through monitoring and occasional intervention
strategies.
Source: Dartmouth College
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Posted by Unknown
on Saturday, January 26, 2013.
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