4.5 Article

Defoliation by processionary moth significantly reduces tree growth: a quantitative review

Journal

ANNALS OF FOREST SCIENCE
Volume 69, Issue 8, Pages 857-866

Publisher

SPRINGER FRANCE
DOI: 10.1007/s13595-012-0209-0

Keywords

Meta-analysis; Thaumetopea; Pinus; Cedrus; Defoliation; Growth

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Funding

  1. EU

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Forests are important carbon sinks, but increasing temperatures may favour increases in insect populations, resulting in greater damage to trees. This, in turn, would lead to lower levels of carbon sequestration, intensifying global warming. It is therefore important to predict the impact of insect defoliation on tree growth accurately. The main insect defoliators of conifers in Southern Europe and North Africa are pine and cedar processionary moths (Lepidoptera, Thaumetopoeidae). We conducted a meta-analysis based on 45 study cases, to estimate the effect of processionary moth defoliation on tree growth. Overall, processionary moth defoliation had a significant impact on tree growth, regardless of the tree and moth species considered. Mean relative tree growth loss increased with the rate of defoliation levelling out at ca. 50 %; it was significantly larger for young than for old trees. These results suggest that estimates of processionary moth defoliation could easily be incorporated into tree growth models, to predict the effect of processionary moth outbreaks on carbon sequestration in Mediterranean forests.

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