Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 3, No. 1, July 1930
Concerning the Control and
Eradication of the Mountain Pine Beetle
By Godfrey, Stetson, Solinsky, Wynd, Patterson
A line drawn east and west through the
center of Crater Lake National Park, has become of interest, not alone
to the Park Service, but also to every forestry institution and person
interested in the conservation of our forests. That line represents the
encroaching outpost of a vast army of predatory insects which are
destroying the forests of the Cascade Range.
North of this line lies an area of
somewhat unfertile lands covering over 33,000 acres, in which
practically the entire forest is dead, excepting a few stands of fir and
of hemlock. The greatest percentage of the forest cover was lodgepole
pines, and over 90% of these are destroyed, excepting, again, such trees
as are less than six inches in diameter.
South of this line, is an intermediary
section, covered with the same timber, two to three miles wide, in which
the trees have been attacked.
Extending indefinitely southward, from
this intermediary section, mixed with the deep forests of Mountain
Hemlock and first, are the Western White Pine and Yellow Pines, the
standing living forest of incalculable value, which is threatened by
this invasion.
The infection appeared in the northern
area about 1915 and since that time, as mentioned, has destroyed the
entire stand of pines. Since 1920 this same insect has been developing
in areas south of Crater Lake. The Park Service has expended
considerable sums in an effort to destroy the beetle and preserve the
forest.
In the spring of 1925 anxiety
crystallized into action. Of the remaining pine forest stands, the
entire timbered area of the park was threatened with destruction which
seemed beyond control. The situation was brought before public and
governmental attention and as a result, preliminary measure were begun
largely with the object of finding what could be done to prevent the
parasite from spreading into the Yellow Pines which covered the southern
portion of the park, and which composed the most valuable timberland,
both from a scenic and permanent standpoint. The efforts yielded little
encouragement. The future held visions of another "silver forest", gaunt
skeletons of trees stripped in time of their bark; an area of desolation
similar to that in the north, creating in the form of greater fire
hazard, a menace to the new growth which might otherwise by natures plan
conceal the desolation.
The insect causing this great
destruction, the mountain pine beetle
(Dendroctorius monticolae, Hopk) is about the size of a grain of
wheat, cylindrical in shape and black in color.
The egg is very small, and pearl-white.
The larva, full grown is also about the size of the adult, white,
cylindrical, slightly curved and has a broad head; the pupa is almost of
similar size; the newly formed young beetle is brown.
The beetle attacks many species of
coniferous trees; in the park it attacks and kills the lodgepole pine,
white pine, sugar, yellow and mountain white bark pine and the Engleman
spruce. Larger and older trees are prefered, and the trunks and base of
larger limbs of these although even saplings are attacked.
The fatal effect upon the tree is due
to the life habits of the insect. The adult enters to the cambium, or
living layer of the tree, by boring entrance holes through the outer
bark. After entrance to the cambium layer, longitudinal galleries of
some length are excavated on the surface of this sapwood, an in niches
along the sides of these galleries the eggs are laid.
When the grub, or larva hatches, it
feeds upon the cambium tissue, horizontally. The effect of the brood of
one beetle might be negligible, but when many have entered, the tree is,
by these many larvae feeding somewhere throughout its girth from just
above ground to the largest branches, completely girdled in its very
life tissue.
The season of activity of this beetle
varies somewhat with elevations and climatic conditions. In Crater Lake
National Park, the activity usually begins early in May and continues to
September. Beetles which have wintered in trees begin to emerge in June,
and this continues until August. New trees are of course attacked during
this period and until late in August. The larvae hatch during early
July, and continue to hatch and feed until late in September. With the
advent of winter conditions, they become dormant in various stages of
development, including some parent adults. Activity is resumed early in
May. The parent adults lay eggs and these larvae, together with those
which were dormant during the winter, feed until early June, when
pupation takes place. The new adults emerge during July and August, thus
completing the life cycle.
When an adult beetle enters a tree, the
dust of its boring falls from the entrance holes and lodges in the bark
crevices or is found upon the ground. Soon resin exudes from these
holes, forming pitch tubes, which are very obvious and are unmistakeable
signs of infestation.
The needles of the tree soon turn a
yellowish white; and from two to eight months later, brick red. The tree
is then dead, and partially dried out. By the end of July after the year
of attack, the bark is marked by numerous circular holes, about 1/16
inch in diameter. These are the exit holes by which this new brood
emerge from the tree. During the succeeding fall and winter, the needles
fall from the tree; by the third year the bark starts to fall and soon
the stark, bare trunk and limbs are exposed and the ghostly bleached
trees form the "ghost forests" or "silver forests" found in various
localities.