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OKIsItJustMe

(19,938 posts)
Tue Jul 16, 2013, 11:25 AM Jul 2013

Diverse Forests, Industrialization and People Help Non-native Forest Pests Thrive in Northeastern US

http://www.nrs.fs.fed.us/news/release/AFPE
[font face=Serif][font size=5]Diverse Forests, Industrialization and People Help Non-native Forest Pests Thrive in Northeastern U.S.[/font]

[font size=3]MORGANTOWN, WV, July 16, 2013 - Beginning with early colonists who landed in the New World loaded with dreams, grit and perhaps the continent’s first alien forest pests, and continuing today with the expansion of global trade, the northeastern United States has been ground zero for damaging non-native forest pest invasions.

In a study recently published on-line in the journal Diversity and Distributions, U.S. Forest Service researchers Andrew Liebhold, Laura Blackburn, Susan Frankel and partners used spatial data to demonstrate that the distribution of invasive forest pests is highly focused, with a particularly large number of species established in the northeastern region and then moderate but still troublesome numbers radiating to the west and south. The study, “A highly aggregated geographical distribution of forest pest invasions in the USA,” is available at: http://www.nrs.fs.fed.us/pubs/43853

As the landing place for early American colonists, and continuing with the industrialization and proliferation of cargo imports, the Northeast has been receiving invasive forest insects far longer than anywhere else in the nation. The earliest record associated with the 79 invasive forest pests used in the analysis dates back to 1794, and 19 species were detected before 1900. Seventy-five percent of the invasive forest pests included in the study were detected before 1940.

In terms of invasive forest insects, tree species diversity works against Northeastern forests.

“The Northeast has an abundance of diverse hardwood tree species, and 65 percent of the insect and pathogen invaders included in this study colonize hardwood tree species,” said Liebhold, a research entomologist with the U.S. Forest Service’s Northern Research Station. “Had these non-native insects disembarked in a forest that is predominately pine for example, most wouldn’t have survived to become the damaging non-native forest pests that they are today.”

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