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Invasive Insects Killing Pines At Acadia National Park

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A tiny, almost microscopic, insect is killing pine trees at Acadia National Park, where biologists and entomologists are trying to determine how widespread the infestation is and what can be done to slow it.

"Red pine scale" has been found in pine stands in the park on the south side of Norumbega Mountain near Lower Haddock Pond in the town of Mount Desert. The disease was first discovered in the United States in 1946 in Connecticut, and since then has severely affected red pine stands in Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, Pennsylvania, and more recently, New Hampshire, according to the Park Service.

This is the first confirmed infestation of red pine scale in Maine, the agency added.

Red pine trees across Maine are under stress from multiple agents. Regular inspections of dying trees on Mount Desert Island by Maine Forest Service staff previously determined that two shoot blights have been contributing to mortality of red pine for at least five years, especially in areas of thin soils and southern exposures, a park release said. High levels of mortality from these fungal diseases may have delayed recognition of the tiny scale insects, which are about the size of the head of a pin.

This time of year, some life stages of the pest look like tiny elliptical shells, and others spin small, white, woolly tufts where they settle on the twigs.

National Park Service biologists are working with the Maine Forest Service and U.S. Forest Service entomologists and other conservation partners on response planning, including gathering more information about the extent of the infestation. The Park Service has announced that Mount Desert Island will be included in a new study of red pine decline across New England that will be conducted by researchers from the University of New Hampshire and the U.S. Forest Service. Park managers hope that lessons learned from this infestation will be used to slow further spread of red pine scale and protect forests from similar pests such as hemlock woolly adelgid.

Acadia Deputy Superintendent David Manski said that surveys to delineate affected areas will be conducted by trained entomologists this winter, when there is less risk of spreading the pest to unaffected areas.

Eggs, immature scales called “crawlers” and adult scales, all present now, can be carried on clothing and vehicles, as well as by birds, mammals and strong winds, according to park officials. Park staff will also survey Park Service forests adjacent to Sargeant Drive to identify and remove any dead trees that pose a hazard to motorists. “We anticipate that few of these trees will pose an immediate threat because red pine trees that have recently died are slow to decay and generally not susceptible to windthrow,” Mr. Manski added.

Park managers currently have no plans to cut and remove dead or dying red pines on large areas. Although salvage harvests have occurred in other states where red pine scale has killed trees, harvests do not appear to have prevented the spread of the insect. In fact, moving trimmed or harvested materials in spring through fall can actually spread the insect. Maine Forest Service Entomologist Allison Kanoti, who confirmed the identification of the red pine scale last week on materials submitted by a local gardener, advised that little research on other forms of control has been conducted recently.

Park biologists note that trees in the understory will likely respond to increased light conditions with quick and vigorous growth. As dead red pines trees begin to be recycled, they may provide important habitat for bats, woodpeckers, and other cavity dwellers, and will return nutrients to the soil for the next forest that will replace the dying overstory.

As with trees affected with shoot blights, branches on scale-impacted red pine tend to die from the bottom up. However, with scale damage, needles turn orange towards the inside of the tree first, with newer needles towards the tips changing color last. Park staff would like you to report areas suspected to have damage from this pest to the Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry, Maine Forest Service’s Insect and Disease Laboratory staff in Augusta at 207-287-2431 or email [email protected].

Comments

Its not only pines vs conifers but variety of conifers as well.  The lodgepole dominated my local landscape because it is a sun loving tree.  150 years ago the miners stripped the entire forest to support their efforts.  As a result, the returning forest was a monoculture lodgepole forest with most trees of similar age.  As they grew older, their resistence to pests such as the pine beelte or vulnerablily to drought increases - all at the same time making them susceptible to massive die-offs. 

Unfortunately there has been massive clear cutting of these dead groves.  When one strolls through these clear cuts 2-3yrs after the cut, the predominate (almost exclusive) young sappling is a lodgepole pine.  If you go through an uncut stand of dead trees, the rebound sapplings are much more heavily weighted towards Spruce.  Why?  Spruce prefer the shade - even the limited shade provided by standing dead and the occassional lodgepole survivor. 

Left alone (or at least limiting the cutting to actual dead trees) the rebounding forest will be far more diverse in variety and age and will be far less susceptible to total destruction. 


Actually Gary, throughout much of the Rockies, aspen is less than half as extensive as it formerly was, and the decline seems to be accelerating:

 

https://archive.org/details/gov.nps.rmrs.fading

 

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/whats-killing-the-aspen-931...


I suspect that the commercial interests guide a majority of this line of thinking.

In my area its government that is the major driver interfering with the natural process.  In an effort to justify their existance and "do something", they are poring millions of dollars down the clear cutting drain, setting us up for vulnerable forests in the future and making the landscape look horrible in the process. 


Just as expected.  Lots of opinions but no facts.


Tahoma, I didn't realize that.  Thanks for the links.  I drove through colorado a few years back during fall peak, and the blazing yellow color of the aspen forests was rather striking, at least to me.  It was a lot more prolific than in other portions of the Rockies where aspens are just a smattering of the forest canopy and not a large portion of it.

Where i saw the uptick in aspen stands was in Idaho close to my old house.  Aspen are not as prolific as forests of pines, fir, and spruce in that area.  Makes you wonder if the climate is becoming more accommodating to aspens in the Northern Rockies, since it's much cooler than in regions of Colorado, and so they will migrate north over the coming centuries, and the boreal forests will continue to retreat north as well.  Maybe Colorado will become a montane desert if things continue?  Just a thought. 

Here is a view of what the invasive hemlock wooly adelgid has done in the Smokies.  As these trees fall over, deciduous trees are going to take over.  The devastation is fairly extensive.


Did.  Science.  Not opinions.


Did.

The only substantiation you asked for where for claims I never made.  Ask for substantiation for a claim of fact I did make, I will provide it. 

Science. Not opinions.

I wasn't aware opinions were taboo on this site.


Here is some interesting science.

It's becoming obvious that these conifer species are in a northward retreat.  The visual evidence is all around us.


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