dc.contributor.author Jean-Claude Grégoire
dc.contributor.author Olav Skarpaas
dc.contributor.author Kyrre Kausrud
dc.contributor.author Nils Chr. Stenseth
dc.contributor.author Bjørn Økland
dc.contributor.author Nadir Erbilgin
dc.contributor.author Kyrre Kausrud
dc.date.accessioned 2025-06-14T03:53:44Z
dc.date.available 2025-06-14T03:53:44Z
dc.date.issued 2011-05-11
dc.description.abstract <jats:p>In recent decades we have seen rapid and co‐occurring changes in landscape structure, species distributions and even climate as consequences of human activity. Such changes affect the dynamics of the interaction between major forest pest species, such as bark beetles (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, Scolytinae), and their host trees. Normally breeding mostly in broken or severely stressed spruce; at high population densities some bark beetle species can colonise and kill healthy trees on scales ranging from single trees in a stand to multi‐annual landscape‐wide outbreaks. In Eurasia, the largest outbreaks are caused by the spruce bark beetle, <jats:italic>Ips typographus</jats:italic> (Linnaeus), which is common and shares a wide distribution with its main host, Norway spruce (<jats:italic>Picea abies</jats:italic> Karst.). A large literature is now available, from which this review aims to synthesize research relevant for the population dynamics of <jats:italic>I. typographus</jats:italic> and co‐occurring species under changing conditions.</jats:p><jats:p>We find that spruce bark beetle population dynamics tend to be metastable, but that mixed‐species and age‐heterogeneous forests with good site‐matching tend to be less susceptible to large‐scale outbreaks. While large accumulations of logs should be removed and/or debarked before the next swarming period, intensive removal of all coarse dead wood may be counterproductive, as it reduces the diversity of predators that in some areas may play a role in keeping <jats:italic>I. typographus</jats:italic> populations below the outbreak threshold, and sanitary logging frequently causes edge effects and root damage, reducing the resistance of remaining trees. It is very hard to predict the outcome of interspecific interactions due to invading beetle species or <jats:italic>I. typographus</jats:italic> establishing outside its current range, as they can be of varying sign and strength and may fluctuate depending on environmental factors and population phase. Most research indicates that beetle outbreaks will increase in frequency and magnitude as temperature, wind speed and precipitation variability increases, and that mitigating forestry practices should be adopted as soon as possible considering the time lags involved.</jats:p>
dc.description.epage 51
dc.description.spage 34
dc.description.volume 87
dc.identifier.doi 10.1111/j.1469-185x.2011.00183.x
dc.identifier.handle 2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/92222
dc.identifier.issn 1464-7931
dc.identifier.issn 1469-185X
dc.identifier.openaire doi_dedup___
dc.identifier.pmid 21557798
dc.identifier.uri https://trapdev.rcub.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/357451
dc.openaire.affiliation University of Oslo
dc.openaire.collaboration 1
dc.publisher Wiley
dc.rights CLOSED
dc.rights.license Wiley Online Library User Agreement
dc.source Biological Reviews
dc.subject Sylviculture
dc.subject Ecologie
dc.subject Population dynamics
dc.subject Ecologie [animale]
dc.subject Climate Change
dc.subject Phytoparasitologie et phytopathologie
dc.subject Population Dynamics
dc.subject Forestry
dc.subject Zoologie forestierecynégétique
dc.subject Outbreak dynamics
dc.subject Trees
dc.subject Coleoptera
dc.subject Forest pests
dc.subject Ips typographus
dc.subject Bark beetles
dc.subject Entomologie
dc.subject Climate change
dc.subject Animals
dc.subject Picea
dc.subject.fos 0106 biological sciences
dc.subject.fos 01 natural sciences
dc.subject.sdg 15. Life on land
dc.title Population dynamics in changing environments: the case of an eruptive forest pest species
dc.type publication

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