Mountain pine beetle: protecting Minnesota

researcher Brian Aukema in lab studying cut tree stumps

Researcher Brian Aukema studies mountain pine beetle in a lab

 

Background

The mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae Hopkins) has killed millions of acres of pine forest in the western US and Canada. Although physical distance and cold temperatures have kept it outside of Minnesota, barriers are quickly breaking down as the timber trade expands and the climate continues to warm. Dead beetles have already turned up in wood imported to the state. Mountain pine beetle now ranks as Minnesota's number one invasive insect threat.

This project will develop a monitoring system, based on pheromone-baited traps, to facilitate early detection of mountain pine beetles in the state. It will also explore whether the mountain pine beetle could have any native predators or competitors in Minnesota, and how strong Minnesota pines' defense response would be against infection. Together, this information will help scientists and managers build a plan of action for eradication.

Research questions

  • Can mountain pine beetle monitoring be improved with new pheromone-baited traps?
  • Do competitor or predator insect species also respond to the presence of mountain pine beetle pheromone – providing another way to keep mountain pine beetle out of the state?
  • How susceptible are Minnesota’s pine species to the mountain pine beetle, as measured by trees’ natural resistance to the disease-causing fungi spread by the insect?

Outcomes

Repeated surveys did not find mountain pine beetles in Minnesota. Scant few individuals were captured dispersing far from active infestations in western states. We found that local bark beetles and predators do not optimally recognize the insect’s chemical signals, however, suggesting that such components of invasion resistance might be low. Because we still lack knowledge about how mountain pine beetles persist in endemic states, and whether colonization densities might actually be lower in other species of Minnesota’s pines if they have lower defensive responses, continued vigilance against mountain pine beetle as a threat to Minnesota’s pine forests is warranted.

Publications

Outreach and presentations

  • Entomological Society of America
  • IUFRO Conference on Biological Invasions in Forests
  • North American Forest Insect Work Conference
  • North Central Forest Pest Workshop
  • Western Forest Insect Work Conference
  • Upper Midwest Invasive Species Conference
  • Sustainable Forest Education Cooperative
  • State Forest Health Cooperators
  • Northern Advanced Silviculture Program
  • Minnesota Forest Industries
  • MN Department of Natural Resources Forestry Team

News and media

Research team

Brian Aukema | principal investigator

Kevin Chase | post-doctoral researcher (2017-2018)

Zach Smith | Masters student

Kristine Jecha | research assistant

Elgin Lee | research assistant

Tenzin Dothar | research assistant

Mara Short | research assistant

 

Lab or other website

forest-insects.umn.edu

 

Collaborating organizations

Minnesota Department of Agriculture

Wheaton College Biological Field Station

US Forest Service

University of Alberta

Bethel University