Tomicus piniperda

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tomicus piniperda
Tomicus piniperda1.jpg
Adult feeding in pine shoot, Hungary
Scientific classification edit
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Coleoptera
Family: Curculionidae
Genus: Tomicus
Species:
T. piniperda
Binomial name
Tomicus piniperda
Synonyms
  • Dermestes piniperda
  • Myelophilus piniperda

Tomicus piniperda, the common pine shoot beetle, is a bark beetle native throughout Europe, northwestern Africa, and northern Asia. It is one of the most destructive shoot-feeding species in northern Europe.[2][3]

Its primary host plant is Scots pine Pinus sylvestris, but it also uses European black pine P. nigra, maritime pine P. pinaster, eastern white pine P. strobus, red pine P. resinosa, jack pine P. banksiana and other pines to a small extent, and more rarely on spruce Picea and larch Larix.[2][3][4]

Description[]

Pine shoot galleries. Plate from John Curtis's British Entomology

It is black or dark brown, 3.5–4.8 mm long, with a cylindrical body, rounded at the head and abdomen ends.[2][5] It breeds in recently dead and dying trees, most often windblown trees lying on the ground but also in e.g. fire-killed standing trees. The adults tunnel a breeding gallery in spring, up to 25 cm long, parallel to the wood grain, where they lay their eggs. On hatching, the larvae chew through the phloem radially from the gallery for several months, emerging as new adults in late summer. The adults then feed through the autumn and winter on the pith in strong apical shoots of healthy young trees, killing the bored-out shoots. This does not kill the tree, but causes damage to the growth form, reducing the economic value of the timber by reducing growth rates and stem straightness.[2] There is one generation per year, with most adults dying after breeding many times, though a few survive to breed again a year later.[2] Unlike most bark beetles, Tomicus piniperda does not use pheromones for pre-breeding association and pairing, but instead homes in on the resin scent emitted by damaged specimens of the host species.[6]

Taxonomy[]

Species closely related to Tomicus piniperda include (lesser pine shoot beetle), with a similar distribution but ecologically separated, using standing dead pines and with its breeding galleries across the grain, not parallel to it;[2] Tomicus destruens in the Mediterranean region, which differs in details of ecology, infesting primarily stone pine P. pinea and maritime pine P. pinaster;[4] and in southwestern China on Yunnan pine Pinus yunnanensis.[3][7] Historically, these species were often not distinguished from T. piniperda, but they are reproductively isolated, which has consequences for pest control.[3][7]

Invasive problems[]

The beetle has been introduced accidentally to northeastern North America, where it has become an invasive species.[3] The first known occurrence in North America was found in July 1992 at a Christmas tree farm close to Cleveland, Ohio, from where it has spread to 11 states in the United States and to Ontario and Quebec in Canada.[8] The beetle has been identified as a serious pest in the United States.[9] As a precautionary step to help protect pine plantations, a United States federal quarantine was introduced in 1992 in the northeast and north-midwest, regulating movement of pine logs and bark, nursery stock, and Christmas trees from infested to uninfested areas, and a similar quarantine brought in to cover part of southeast Canada in 1993 by the Canadian authorities.[3]

Fungal associations[]

As with all bark beetle species, this species is known to associate with a wide range of fungal taxa. However, there is little clarity regarding the existence of symbiotic relationships between this beetle species and the fungal species that make up its mycobiota.

References[]

  1. ^ Crop Protection Compendium Tomicus piniperda Archived 2006-10-04 at the Wayback Machine. CAB International
  2. ^ a b c d e f J M Davies and C J King (1977) Pine Shoot Beetles. Forestry Commission Leaflet 3. HMSO, London ISBN 0-11-710219-9.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Global Invasive Species Database: Tomicus piniperda (insect)
  4. ^ a b Vasconcelos, T., Nazare, N., Branco, M., Kerdelhue, C., Sauvard, D., & Lieutier, F. (2003). Host Preference of Tomicus piniperda and Tomicus destruens for Three Pine Species. Proceedings: JUFRO Kanazava 2003 “Forest Insect Population Dynamics and Host Influences" 19–21 Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Pests and Diseases Image Library: Pine shoot beetle Archived 2008-07-29 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Byers, J. A., Lanne, B. S., Löfqvist, J., Schlyter, F., & Bergström, G. (1985). Olfactory Recognition of Host-Tree Susceptibility by Pine Shoot Beetles. Naturwissenschaften 72: 324-326.
  7. ^ a b Kirkendall, L. R., Faccoli, M. & Hui Ye (2008). Description of the Yunnan shoot borer, Tomicus yunnanensis Kirkendall & Faccoli sp. n. (Curculionidae, Scolytinae), an unusually aggressive pine shoot beetle from southern China, with a key to the species of Tomicus. Zootaxa 1819: 25–39.
  8. ^ Ministry of Agriculture and Lands: Pine Shoot Beetle
  9. ^ "Common Pine Shoot Beetle". Gallery of Pests. Don't Move Firewood. Retrieved 12 October 2011.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""