• Title of article

    Effects of oxidant air pollutants on western pine beetle (Coleoptera: Scolytidae) populations in southern California Original Research Article

  • Author/Authors

    Donald L. Dahlsten، نويسنده , , David L. Rowney، نويسنده , , Ronald N. Kickert، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    415
  • To page
    423
  • Abstract
    The attack rates, brood survival, and emergence rates of the western pine beetle, Dendroctonus brevicomis LeConte, and incidence of entomophagus associates, were compared between photochemical oxidant damaged, and apparently healthy, ponderosa pine trees, Pinus ponderosa Dougl. ex Laws in the San Bernardino Forest in Southern California. The results from this study suggest that oxidant-damaged trees attacked by western pine beetle produced about the same total brood with lower initial attacks when compared with healthier trees, whereas the numbers of predators and parasitoids were higher in the healthier trees. This higher productivity trend for western pine beetle is most evident in trees attacked by the first beetle generation. Trees attacked by the second generation, both damaged and healthy, produced much less western pine beetle brood than generation 1 attacked trees, regardless of oxidant damage. The implication of these results is that, in stands with a higher proportion of oxidant damaged trees, a given population of western pine beetle could kill more trees, and increase at a greater rate, than in a stand with a lower proportion of damaged trees.
  • Keywords
    Forest ecosystem , Air pollution , Population dynamics , tree mortality. , bark beetle
  • Journal title
    ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
  • Serial Year
    1997
  • Journal title
    ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
  • Record number

    729175