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Article

Outbreak of Pityogenes chalcographus and Pityophthorus pityographus on Spruce Seedlings Resulting from Inappropriate Management in a Forest Nursery

Faculty of Forestry and Wood Sciences, Czech University of Life Sciences, Kamýcká 129, 16501 Praha, Czech Republic
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Forests 2022, 13(7), 987; https://doi.org/10.3390/f13070987
Submission received: 13 May 2022 / Revised: 18 June 2022 / Accepted: 21 June 2022 / Published: 23 June 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Forest Pathology and Entomology—Series II)

Abstract

:
In this report, we describe a local outbreak of small bark beetles on 4-year-old seedlings of Picea abies in a forest nursery in Central Europe in 2021. In March 2022, 10–50% of the seedlings were “dry” (i.e., with dry and easily broken twigs and with easily peeled bark) in each 4-row bed in the nursery. Half of the dry plants were completely covered by galleries of bark beetles and another 35% of the seedlings were with one or two bark beetle galleries. Almost 90% of the beetles found on the affected seedlings were Pityogenes chalcographus, and only 10% were Pityophthorus pityographus (we studied 100 seedlings in the second bed). The chipping of Picea pungens in previous years had left many felled trunks, branches, and other logging residues in the area. These residues are covered by galleries of both bark beetles. We suggest that, after multiplying on the logging residues, the beetles could not find suitable material for reproduction and were lured to the nursery seedlings, which had been weakened by location (a location that provided inadequate shade and no wind protection) and by repeated replanting.

1. Introduction

Bark beetles (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Scolytinae) are currently the most important forest pests in both Eurasia and North America. The main bark beetle pests are species of Ips in Eurasia and species of Dendroctonus in North America [1]. These species infest host trees, attract other beetles, and create dense systems of galleries in stems in which females lay eggs. Hatched larvae consume the phloem of mature trees, which results in tree mortality. Bark beetles in these genera are mostly monophagous, but some species are oligophagous or polyphagous [2]. Economically less important and smaller species compared to those mentioned in the previous sentences occur on the thinner parts of trees. These small species can be abundant, but they do not kill adult trees [2].
Many authors have recorded seedling mortality resulting from feeding by bark beetles. Only bark beetles in the genus Hylastes are recognized as serious pests of coniferous seedlings [2,3]. Most of the reported bark beetle infestations of coniferous seedlings have involved the widely distributed genus Pityophthorus (Eichhoff, 1864 [1]). The reasons for the increase of Pityophtorus bark beetles abundance and subsequent infestation of seedlings are not mentioned (Table A1).
This genus has a total of 20 species and subspecies in Europe, including two invasive species, P. juglandis Blackman, 1928 and P. solus Blackman, 1928 [4]. Species of the genus Pityophthorus are secondary pests that invade weakened trees or withering parts of trees [5]. Only a few reports have documented Pityophthorus bark beetles as primary pests of mature trees: P. confertus Swaine, 1917 and P. confinis LeConte, 1876 caused the deaths of several dozen Pinus ponderosa in the U.S.A. [6]; infestation of healthy Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) twigs by P. orarius Bright, 1968 reduced tree fertility [7]; and P. carmeli Swaine, 1918 and P. setosus Blackman, 1927 can damage healthy twigs of Pinus radiata D. Don and transmit the fungus Fusarium circinatum Nirenberg & O’Donnell, which causes Pitch Canker Disease [8].
In Europe, the most common species in this genus is P. pityographus Ratzeburg, 1837, which occurs in high abundance on all species of European conifers, mostly on thin branches <2 cm in diameter [2,9,10]. Economic damage caused by this species has been previously reported only once [11]. More damage in southern Europe is caused by P. ramulorum Perris, 1856 (syn. pubescens Marsham, 1802), which carries the fungus F. circinatum [12]. Along with a fungus that it transmits P. juglandis causes “thousand cankers disease” in Italy [13].
Data regarding the occurrence of Pityophthorus bark beetles on seedlings in Europe are limited to two very early papers: Nüsslin [14] reported an infestation of pine seedlings by P. lichtensteinii Ratzeburg, 1837, and Escherich [15] reported infestations on spruce seedlings by P. pityographus and P. exculptus Ratzeburg, 1837.
In this report, we describe the local outbreak of two species of small bark beetles, P. pityographus and Pityogenes chalcographus (Linnaeus, 1761), in a forest nursery (Figure 1). We also consider the possible causes of the outbreak.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Locality

The forest nursery at Kovářská (Central Europe: 50.4290047 N, 13.0515328 E) is located in the forest of the Krušné Hory Mts. at 860 m above sea level (asl). The nursery occupies 1.5 ha, and has 10 beds, each with four rows of 4-year-old Picea abies seedlings. The seedlings were transplanted into the rows when they were 1 year old. The nursery sits on a <5° slope with western exposure (Figure 1). Sun exposure throughout the year lasts from 10:00 to sunset. Westerly winds predominate and affect the nursery because it is not protected by forests to the west. The soil is acidic with signs of glazing. Spruce seedlings were removed from the soil in April 2021, but because the customer did pick them up, the nursery owner reforested them after 2 weeks [16].

2.2. Samplings

On 25 March 2022, we evaluated the health of the seedlings in 5 of the 10 beds; these beds were located 1, 3, 5, 8, and 11 m from the western edge of the nursery and, unlike the other 5 beds, these beds were not covered by snow (Figure 1). In each bed, >250 seedlings were rated as “dry” (i.e., with dry breaking twigs and easily peeled bark), “withering” (i.e., with at least one branched with dry, brown, and shriveled needles), or “healthy” (i.e., all twigs with green needles).
In addition, we removed all of the above-ground parts of 100 seedlings in the middle of the second bed, e.g., 3 m from the edge. In the laboratory, the bark and bast of the seedlings were carefully removed with a scalpel, and the identities of all beetles found were determined by T. Fiala by Pfeffer’s key [2].
As galleries of bark beetles cannot be distinguished under bark of seedlings, we quantified the infestation of cut seedlings by bark beetles according to the following categories from the most to the least severe: the whole surface was covered by bark beetle galleries; two bark beetle gallery systems were evident; one bark beetle gallery system was evident; the bark beetle nuptial gallery (or galleries) was flooded with resin; and the seedling lacked any evidence of bark beetle infestation (Figure 2).

2.3. Statistical Analyses

The relationship between the number of dry seedlings and the distance from the western edge of the nursery was analyzed by regression. The thicknesses of the trunks of dry vs. healthy seedlings were compared with a t-test in in Statistica 12.0.

3. Results

In the five beds that were not covered with snow, a significant percentage of the seedlings were dry. Almost 50% of the seedlings were dry in the first two beds from the western edge of the nursery, and the percentage of dry seedlings in beds decreased with distance from the western edge of the nursery (y = 48.3 − 28.3 × log10(x); r = −0.87; p = 0.05). The percentage of withering seedlings decreased (y = 11.6 − 7.5 × log10(x); r = −0.73; p = 0.16; Figure 3). In each bed, the percentage of healthy plants increased with distance from the western edge of the nursery (y = 40.1 + 35.8 × log10(x); r = 0.85; p = 0.07; Figure 3). However, the relationships are not significant.
Of the 100 seedlings collected, 56% were dry, 6% were withering, and 38% were healthy. The thickness of stems at the soil surface did not significantly differ between dry and healthy seedlings (t = −0.27; p = 0.79; Table 1). Half of the dry seedlings were completely covered (from the base of the stem-to-stem diameter ≤3 mm) with bark beetle galleries (nuptial chambers, maternal galleries, larval galleries, and pupal chambers) that were deeply cut into wood. Fewer than 20% of the 100 plants had only one or two gallery systems, and almost 10% showed no signs of infestation. Only bark beetle entry holes were found in the remainder of the seedlings.
Most healthy, almost 20% of withering, and less than 10% dry plants had no signs of infestation. All results are presented in Table 1.
For the 70 seedlings with signs of infestation (whether dry, withering, or healthy), no beetles were found in 20, and 175 beetles were found in the other 50. One to 10 beetles of P. chalcographus were found in >70% of the dry seedlings. Beetles in resin-flooded nuptial chambers were found in one withering and four healthy seedlings (Figure 2). A total of 20 P. pityographus beetles, one to five per plant, were found in nine dry plants. P. pityographus was found with P. chalcographus in five plants and was found alone in four plants.

4. Discussion

Only a small percentage of dry P. abies seedlings in the nursery lacked signs of bark beetle infestation, and 85% of the dry seedlings (Table 1) had at least one or two bark beetle’s gallery systems. In half of the dry plants, all of the phloem had been consumed by bark beetle larvae, indicating that bark beetles were the main cause of mortality for those seedlings.
Infestation of relatively large seedlings by P. pityographus can be distinguished from infestation by P. chalcographus based on the nuptial chamber, i.e., the nuptial chamber of P. pityographus, but not of P. chalcographus is visible in the wood of the trunk or a branch of sufficient size [2]. However, P. pityographus nuptial chambers were not visible on small seedlings (like those in the current study), because the chambers were cut into the wood due to the thin bast. Almost 90% of the beetles found were P. chalcographus, and only 10% were P. pityographus, which is consistent with previous reports that P. chalcographus is a more aggressive colonizer of trees than P. pityographus [17,18].
Among the 100 seedlings that were examined in the laboratory, we found mature or callow beetles, because both species mainly overwinter as adults. In Central Europe, both species begin flight activity in May [2] and can therefore infest replanted seedlings early in May. F1 beetles P. pityographus do not emerge until autumn, and this species probably has only one generation per year, while P. chalcographus has two to three generations per year [2,19]. In mountain ranges above 800 m, however, bark beetles usually have 1.0 to 1.5 generations per year [20,21,22], and we speculate that both species had one generation in the studied locality (860 m asl) and that part of the F1 generation overwintered in the galleries.
Pityogenes chalcographus is not known as a nursery pest (Table A1), and the current report is the first to document its infestation of nursery trees. P. chalcographus, however, is recognized as a serious primary pest of young conifer trees [2,15]. Pityogenes saalasi Eggers, 1914 and Pityogenes. bidentatus Herbst, 1783 may also be primary pests of young conifers in Siberia and Central Europe [23,24]. Another species in the genus Pityogenes, P. calcaratus Eichhoff, 1878, has also been reported to infest 3- to 8-year-old Pinus halapensis trees [25].
Pityophthorus pityographus and P. chalcographus are among those bark beetles that primarily attack branches [26,27,28]. Therefore, the abundances of P. pityographus and P. chalcographus may increase in Ips typographus outbreak areas (Linnaeus, 1758) [29], because P. pityographus and P. chalcographus multiply on branches and logging residues after P. abies trees are salvage logged in response to the outbreaks [28,30,31].
In the current study area, however, I. typographus was not very abundant, and there was no salvage logging [16]. However, there is or has been a high proportion of Picea pungens in the surrounding forest stands, which have been planted in the area beginning in the 1970s after logging of forest stands that were killed by pollutants [32]. Picea pungens has been gradually eliminated; the trees are being chipped immediately after being felled or sometime later (Figure 4). After chipping in stands, branches 1 cm to 5 cm thick and 30 cm to 100 cm long remain on the soil surface. As reported by several other authors c.f. [33,34,35,36] and based on our own observations, both P. chalcographus and P. pityographus multiply on felled trees and logging residues (Figure 4).
We speculate that a large number of newly emerged beetles flew from the residues and searched for suitable breeding sites in 2021 and infested the seedlings in the nursery because better alternatives were not available. Seedlings are more susceptible to stressors than mature trees [37]. In the nursery of the current study, the seedlings were planted at the edge of the forest, which is sunlit all day and unprotected from the wind. These factors certainly dried the soil and consequently weakened the seedlings (Figure 3), which were also stressed by being removed from the nursery soil and then replanted in that soil. As documented in this report, these seedlings were attacked by P. chalcographus and P. pityographus, while attack by bark beetles was not observed in the neighboring two nurseries (50.4295 N, 13.0548 E; 50.4291 N, 13.0552 E; personal observations). The latter two nurseries are surrounded by forests and are therefore more shaded and less wind-blown than the current nursery.

5. Conclusions

In a forest nursery in the mountains of Central Europe, some of the seedlings were killed by P. chalcographus and P. pityographus. These two bark beetles became secondary pests because of a large increase in their abundance, but not because of climate change or the salvage logging of mature stands infested by I. typographus. The presence of chipping residues and long-lying felled P. pungens apparently led to an increase in the abundance of both species. The resulting adult beetles of P. chalcographus and P. pityographus could evidently not find suitable material for reproduction in the area, and were therefore attracted to the nursery seedlings, which were weakened by the drying of the habitat and by their repeated removal and return to the soil. If the seedlings were not stressed, we doubt that they would have been infested by P. chalcographus or P. pityographus.
It follows that the infestation of P. abies by P. chalcographus and P. pityographus was probably exceptional rather than typical. Solving this problem will not require the capturing of beetles using aggregation pheromones in traps [38,39] or the treating of seedlings with contact insecticides. Solving this problem will instead require reducing the stress experienced by the seedlings.

Author Contributions

The contributions of authors T.F. and J.H. are equal. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by the Ministry of Agriculture of the Czech Republic, grant number QK1920433.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

All data are presented in article.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Bruce Jaffee (USA) for editorial and linguistic improvement of the manuscript, and Milan Hrachovina and Antonín Holeček (LS Klášterec) for cooperation in helping to determine why the seedlings were infested with bark beetles.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

Table A1. Reports of infestations of coniferous seedlings by bark beetles. Country abbreviations: AU—Australia, CA—Canada, CL—Chile, CZ—Czechia, DE—Germany, FI—Finland, IL—Israel, MX—Mexico, NZ—New Zealand, PG—Papua New Guinea, RO—Romania, SE—Sweden, UA—Ukraine, US—United States of America, ZA—South Africa.
Table A1. Reports of infestations of coniferous seedlings by bark beetles. Country abbreviations: AU—Australia, CA—Canada, CL—Chile, CZ—Czechia, DE—Germany, FI—Finland, IL—Israel, MX—Mexico, NZ—New Zealand, PG—Papua New Guinea, RO—Romania, SE—Sweden, UA—Ukraine, US—United States of America, ZA—South Africa.
Bark Beetle SpeciesCountriesTree SpeciesReferences
Carphoborus pinicolens Wood, 1954MX, USAbies, Pinus[40]
Carphoborus sansoni Swaine, 1924CA, USPicea[40]
Cryphalus asperatus Gyllenhal, 1813CZPicea abies[41]
Dendroctonus rhizophagus Thomas and Bright, 1970MXPinus[40]
Hylastes angustatus Herbst, 1793UA, ZAPinus radiata, P. sylvestris, P. patula, P. elliottii[42,43,44,45]
Hylastes ater Paykull, 1800AU, CL, NZ, RO, UAPinus radiata, P. sylvestris, Picea abies[45,46,47,48,49]
Hylastes brunneus Erichson, 1836FI, SEPicea abies[50,51]
Hylastes cunicularius Erichson, 1836DE, SEPicea abies[52,53]
Hylastes linearis Erichson, 1836ILPinus halepensis[54]
Hylastes nigrinus Mannerheim, 1852USPseudotsuga menziesii[55]
Hylastes opacus Erichson, 1836UAP. sylvestris[45]
Hylastes salebrosus Eichhoff, 1868USPinus[40]
Hylurdrectonus araucariae Schedl, 1964PGAraucaria cunnighamii[56]
Hylurgus ligniperda Fabricius, 1787AU, CL, UAP. radiata, P. sylvestris[45,57,58]
Ips paraconfusus Lanier, 1970USP. radiata[59]
Pityogenes calcaratus Eichhoff, 1878ILP. halapensis[25]
Pityophthorus absonus Blackman, 1928CA, USAbies, Pinus[40]
Pityophthorus confertus Swaine, 1917CA, MX, USPinus[40]
Pityophthorus dentifrons Blackman, 1922CA, USPicea[40]
Pityophthorus exculptus Ratzeburg, 1837DEPicea[15]
Pityophthorus grandis Blackman, 1928CA, USPinus ponderosa[40]
Pityophthorus impexus Bright, 1978MXPinus[40]
Pityophthorus lichtensteinii Ratzeburg, 1837DEPinus[14]
Pityophthorus pityographus Ratzeburg, 1837DEPicea[15]
Pityophthorus pseudotsugae Swaine, 1918CA, USAbies, Picea, Pinus, Pseudotsuga, Tsuga[40]
Pityophthorus pulchellus tuberculatus Bright, 1981CA, MX, USPicea, Pinus[40]
Pityophthorus ramulorum Perris, 1856ILP. halepensis[54]
Scolytus monticolae Swaine, 1917CA, USPseudotsuga menziesii[40]

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Figure 1. “Dry” seedlings in a forest nursery near the village of Kovářská in March 2022.
Figure 1. “Dry” seedlings in a forest nursery near the village of Kovářská in March 2022.
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Figure 2. Seedling covered by galleries of bark beetles (A) and bark beetle nuptial chambers flooded with resin (B).
Figure 2. Seedling covered by galleries of bark beetles (A) and bark beetle nuptial chambers flooded with resin (B).
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Figure 3. Percentage of dry (grey), withering (white), and healthy plants (black) in beds as a function of distance from the western edge of the nursery.
Figure 3. Percentage of dry (grey), withering (white), and healthy plants (black) in beds as a function of distance from the western edge of the nursery.
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Figure 4. Forest after chipping of standing Picea pungens trees (A) (50.4259353 N, 13.0619114 E); felled P. pungens trees at forest stands (B) (50.4470644 N, 13.0744211 E); and gallery systems of the bark beetle P. pityographus on logging residues (C) and on stems of felled P. pungens (D) in the surroundings of the forest nursery at Kovářská.
Figure 4. Forest after chipping of standing Picea pungens trees (A) (50.4259353 N, 13.0619114 E); felled P. pungens trees at forest stands (B) (50.4470644 N, 13.0744211 E); and gallery systems of the bark beetle P. pityographus on logging residues (C) and on stems of felled P. pungens (D) in the surroundings of the forest nursery at Kovářská.
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Table 1. Properties of the 100 seedlings that were cut and examined in the laboratory.
Table 1. Properties of the 100 seedlings that were cut and examined in the laboratory.
Category of SeedlingsDryWitheringHealthy
Numbers of seedlings56638
Stem width (mm)5.4 ± 1.56.3 ± 2.15.4 ± 1.7
Numbers of plants with Pityogenes chalcographus beetles4014
Numbers of plants with Pityophthorus pityographus beetles910
Percentage of dry, withering, or healthy plants with
The whole surface covered by galleries5000
Two gallery systems of bark beetles16170
One gallery system of bark beetles19335
Enter holes encapsulated in resin63329
No sign of infestation91766
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Fiala, T.; Holuša, J. Outbreak of Pityogenes chalcographus and Pityophthorus pityographus on Spruce Seedlings Resulting from Inappropriate Management in a Forest Nursery. Forests 2022, 13, 987. https://doi.org/10.3390/f13070987

AMA Style

Fiala T, Holuša J. Outbreak of Pityogenes chalcographus and Pityophthorus pityographus on Spruce Seedlings Resulting from Inappropriate Management in a Forest Nursery. Forests. 2022; 13(7):987. https://doi.org/10.3390/f13070987

Chicago/Turabian Style

Fiala, Tomáš, and Jaroslav Holuša. 2022. "Outbreak of Pityogenes chalcographus and Pityophthorus pityographus on Spruce Seedlings Resulting from Inappropriate Management in a Forest Nursery" Forests 13, no. 7: 987. https://doi.org/10.3390/f13070987

APA Style

Fiala, T., & Holuša, J. (2022). Outbreak of Pityogenes chalcographus and Pityophthorus pityographus on Spruce Seedlings Resulting from Inappropriate Management in a Forest Nursery. Forests, 13(7), 987. https://doi.org/10.3390/f13070987

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