4.4 Article

Verbenone and green-leaf volatiles reduce whitebark pine mortality in a northern range-expanding mountain pine beetle outbreak

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH
Volume 52, Issue 1, Pages 1-11

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/cjfr-2021-0120

Keywords

whitebark pine; white pine blister rust; verbenone; green-leaf volatiles; mountain pine beetle; insect range expansion; forest pest management

Categories

Funding

  1. Parks Canada
  2. Rocky Mountain National Parks Two Pines in Decline: Conservation and Restoration of 5-NeedlePines CoRe Project
  3. Foothills Research Institute Mountain Pine Beetle Ecology Program [X20014]

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This study is the first to test the effectiveness of semiochemical treatments in protecting whitebark pine trees from attacks by mountain pine beetles. The combination of verbenone and green-leaf volatiles was found to be effective in reducing the proportion of trees attacked by the beetles.
This is the first study testing the effectiveness of semiochemical treatments to protect individual trees from a range-expanding mountain pine beetle (MPB; Dendroctonus ponderosae Hopkins, 1902) attack into newly exposed host populations of endangered whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis Engelm.). We investigated the effectiveness of a combination of verbenone and green-leaf volatiles (GLV) to protect rare and valuable disease-resistant trees during a MPB epidemic from 2015 to 2018 in Jasper National Park, Canada. Treatments reduced the proportion of trees attacked by MPB for all diameter classes, across all stands, from 46% to 60%. We also evaluated the effect of the exotic disease white pine blister rust (caused by the fungus Cronartium ribicola J.C. Fisch.) - the species' other main regional threat. MPB were less likely to attack large rust-infected trees than healthy trees, emphasizing the value of the semiochemical treatment. Protecting large cone-bearing disease-resistant whitebark pine trees is fundamental to whitebark pine recovery. Maintaining reproductive trees on the landscape increases the frequency and diversity of rust-resistant genotypes more effectively than just planting seedlings to replace MPB-killed trees, because this slow-growing species takes over 80 years to reproduce. Our study confirmed that protecting large rust-resistant trees with verbenone and GLV is a proactive and effective treatment against MPB for whitebark pine in naive populations.

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