4.7 Article

Prescribed fire does not promote outbreaks of a primary bark beetle at low-density populations

期刊

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY
卷 53, 期 1, 页码 222-232

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.12546

关键词

Dendroctonus ponderosae; lodgepole pine; low-density population; mountain pine beetle; outbreak dynamics; Pinus contorta; prescribed fire; resource pulse

资金

  1. Foothills Research Institute-Mountain Pine Beetle Ecology Program
  2. Alberta Sport, Recreation, Parks and Wildlife Foundation
  3. Alberta Conservation Association
  4. Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada (NSERC)
  5. Alberta Innovates
  6. University of Alberta
  7. NSERC-Discovery

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The causes of bark beetle outbreaks - particularly the role of disturbances - are poorly understood. Stand-scale disturbances, like fires, can suddenly improve local host susceptibility and may attract beetles; however, whether such increases can lead to outbreaks in post-disturbance stands is unclear. Using low-density Dendroctonus ponderosae mountain pine beetle populations in Pinus contorta lodgepole pine forests in western Canada, we investigated whether prescribed fires promote outbreaks or provide only short-term resources. Proportionally more burned than non-burned trees were attacked. At one site, beetle attacks increased in response to a resource pulse, but the proportions of attacked trees and numbers of attacks per tree declined over fouryears after fire. Elsewhere, beetle attacks remained very low. As the resource (phloem) quality of burned trees remained high threeyears after fire, we propose that post-fire mortality, resulting in fewer available host trees, can at least partially explain why D.ponderosae did not build up populations in burned stands.Synthesis and applications. Our study emphasizes the importance of examining long-term trends in fire-bark beetle interactions, and of understanding low-density beetle populations. Because fire does not seem to promote mountain pine beetle outbreaks, we recommend the continued use of prescribed fire for the general management of P. contorta forests with low-density beetle populations.

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