Bark Beetle-Fire Associations in the Greater Yellowstone Area
Document Type
Contribution to Book
Journal/Book Title/Conference
Fire and the Environment : Ecological and Cultural Perspectives
Publication Date
1991
First Page
313
Last Page
320
Abstract
The large forest fires in and around Yellowstone National Park in 1988 bring up many ecological questions, including the role of bark beetles. Bark beetles may contribute to fuel buildup over the years preceding a fire, resulting in stand replacement fires. Fire is important to the survival of seral tree species and bark beetles that reproduce in them. Without fire, seral species are ultimately replaced by climax species. Following fire, bark- and wood-boring beetles respond to fire-injured trees. Because of synchrony of the fires and life cycles of the beetles, beetle infestation in 1988 was not observed in fire-injured trees. However, endemic populations of beetles, beetle infestation in 1988 was not observed in fire-injured trees. However, endemic populations of beetles, upon emergence in 1989, infested large numbers of fire-injured trees. Of the trees examined in each species, 28 to 65 percent were infested by bark beetles: Pinus contora (28 percent) by Ips pini:; Pseudotsuga menziesii (32 percent) by Dendroctonus pseudotsugae; Picea engelmannii (65 percent) by Dendroctonus rufipennis; and Abies lasiocarpa (35 percent) by Buprestidae and Cerambycidae. Most trees infested by bark beetles had 50 percent or more of their basal circumference killed by fire. Bark beetle populations probably will increase in the remaining fire-injured trees.
Recommended Citation
Amman, G. (1991). Bark beetle-fire associations in the Greater Yellowstone Area, pp. 313-320 in: SC Nodvin and TA Waldrop (eds) Fire and the Environment : Ecological and Cultural Perspectives, Proceedings of an International Symposium. Knoxville, TN, March 20-24, 1009. USDA Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station, General Technical Report SE-69.
Comments
This item was written and prepared by U.S. Government employees on official time, and is therefore in the public domain.