Public Safety & Health

Pest outbreak looms in Lane County if storm-toppled Douglas-firs aren’t removed

DOUGLAS-FIR BEETLE (DENDROCTONUS PSEUDOTSUGAE) IS NATIVE TO THE NORTHWEST, ITS POPULATION CAN SOAR WHEN LIVING LARGE-DIAMETER DOUGLAS-FIR TREES ARE THROWN TO THE GROUND. Photo provided

This winter’s heavy snow and wind have knocked down many trees across Lane County, as many as 1,000 per mile in the Highway 58 corridor, according Willamette National Forest sources. This has created perfect conditions in the county for an outbreak of the Douglas-fir beetle, unless landowners act quickly to either remove the downed or damaged trees or apply an insect pheromone to drive away the pest.
Forest Entomologist Christine Buhl is with the Oregon Department of Forestry. Buhl said that while the beetle (Dendroctonus pseudotsugae) is native to the Northwest, its population can soar when living large-diameter Douglas-fir trees are thrown to the ground.
”Normally this pest is scattered on the landscape wherever Douglas-fir grows,” Buhl said. ”However, they tend to concentrate in tree stands where there has been a lot of wind damage.”
Buhl said beetle population booms can follow storms that cause blow down.
Tell-tale signs of this beetle’s presence include frass. This is sawdust-like material the beetle ejects from their galleries underneath the tree’s bark, Buhl explained.
”The beetles first attack downed Douglas-firs and then move to nearby standing trees that are stressed, injured or less vigorous,” she said. ”Attacked trees that cannot drown out infesting beetles with pitch, die and turn red the same year as the attack or the next spring.”
Buhl said landowners can prevent Douglas-fir beetle outbreaks by removing large-diameter downed trees before the insects take flight in the spring looking for new homes.
”Before April, remove any downed Douglas-firs greater than 10 inches in diameter at a point around chest height,” she advised. ”Trees with low vigor should also be removed to reduce stand susceptibility to outbreaks. Large amounts of cull trees created by logging also should not be left on site, particularly in shade.”
Buhl said the beetles will generally not attack trees that have been dead for over a year.
”If removal is delayed or not possible,” Buhl said, ”apply the repellant pheromone called MCH to prevent infestation.”
A naturally occurring beetle repellent, MCH (methylcyclohexenone), can be applied to downed logs or standing green trees to prevent Douglas-fir beetle attacks. Buhl said MCH pouches are most often applied in a grid pattern within a stand to effectively deter infestation. Beetles approaching treated areas are fooled by the pheromone into sensing that beetles already occupy the site and will pass it by.
”This technique is useful in parks, camps or habitat conservation areas where salvage is not possible, but there is a desire to preserve the remaining standing trees,” she said. ”It’s also helpful in forestlands where downed wood can’t be removed before April for one reason or another. However, it will not make beetles that are already in a tree leave. Once they are in, they’re in.”

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