mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

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Playing with fire: mountain pine beetles in a post-burn environment Crisia Tabacaru 1 Jane Park 2 , Nadir Erbilgin 1 1 University of Alberta, 2 Parks Canada

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Page 1: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

Playing with fire: mountain pine beetles in a post-burn environment

Crisia Tabacaru1

Jane Park2, Nadir Erbilgin1

1University of Alberta, 2Parks Canada

Page 2: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

Management Options

Logging/Fire

• cut & burn individual affected trees

• cut/burn unaffected trees to create boundaries

• cut/burn unaffected trees to heterogenize the landscape

Fire

• can mimic a natural disturbance

• necessary in protected areas

Page 3: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

BUT…

fire leaves live, partially burned trees

Page 4: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

Main Objective

To determine whether burned lodgepole pine stands become sinks or sources for MPB…

Page 5: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

Objectives

1. To track MPB population changes in burned and unburned stands

2. To determine MPB colonization differences between burn severities

3. To relate MPB colonization to fire injury at the tree level

4. To determine MPB reproductive success in burned stands

5. To observe responses of MPB natural enemies/competitors to fire

Page 6: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

Study Sites

Saskatchewan Crossing

Ya Ha Tinda Ranch

Mt. Nestor

Page 7: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

Methods

15 plots (10x10m) per burn severity class X 3 classes X 3 sites = 135 plots

Page 8: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

Methods—Spring

• % of trees killed by MPB

• Each tree:

- length of maternal galleries

- # of larval galleries

- indices of fire injury

Page 9: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

Fire injury indices

Bole char

Duff char

Bole char height

Page 10: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

Trapping

• Flight intercept traps • Landing rate traps

Page 11: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

Trapping

• Emergence traps

Page 12: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

Methods—Fall

• # of entrance holes

• Collect traps

• MPB productivity per tree

Page 13: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

Preliminary Results—Mt. Nestor

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

Low Moderate Unburned

Pro

po

rtio

n o

f Tr

ees

Co

lon

ized

(m

ean

± S

D)

2009

2010

Page 14: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment
Page 15: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment
Page 16: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

Current Work—Bark Community

*

0

2

4

6

8

10

Low Moderate Unburned

Nu

mb

er o

f B

ark

Be

etle

s p

er T

rap

(m

ean

± S

E)

FI

Landing Rate

Page 17: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

Future Work

Mark-Recapture Study—Can MPB produced in a burned stand colonize adjacent healthy trees?

Population Dynamics—Create a population model for MPB in burns and healthy stands

Reproduction—Phloem sandwiches

Page 18: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

Acknowledgements

Foothills Research Institute Parks Canada

Alberta Sustainable Resource Development Canadian Forest Service NSERC

Alberta Sport, Recreation, Parks, and Wildlife Foundation Alberta Conservation Association Assistants and Volunteers! http://mpb.alberta.ca/files/images/woods_on_fire.jpg

Page 19: Mpbep 2011 04 prsnttn playingwithfirempbinpostburnenvironment

Thank you!