Dynamics and Management of Rising Outbreak Spruce Budworm Populations

Management of spruce budworm, <i>Choristoneura fumiferana</i> (Clem.), outbreak spread requires understanding the demographic processes occurring in low, but rising populations. For the first time, detailed observations were made in the early stages of outbreak development. We sampled po...

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Main Authors: Jacques Régnière, Barry J. Cooke, Ariane Béchard, Alain Dupont, Pierre Therrien
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-09-01
Series:Forests
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/10/9/748
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spelling doaj-c5a581aad4a54eaaad63779c391699082020-11-24T20:45:01ZengMDPI AGForests1999-49072019-09-0110974810.3390/f10090748f10090748Dynamics and Management of Rising Outbreak Spruce Budworm PopulationsJacques Régnière0Barry J. Cooke1Ariane Béchard2Alain Dupont3Pierre Therrien4Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, P.O. Box 10380 Stn Ste-Foy, Quebec, QC G1V-4C7, CanadaNatural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, 1219 Queen St E, Sault Ste Marie, ON P6A-2E6, CanadaNatural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, P.O. Box 10380 Stn Ste-Foy, Quebec, QC G1V-4C7, CanadaSociété de Protection des Forêts contre les Insectes et Maladies, 1780 Rue Semple, Quebec, QC G1N 4B8, CanadaMinistère des Forêts, de la Faune et des Parcs du Québec, 2700 rue Einstein, Quebec, QC G1P 3W8, CanadaManagement of spruce budworm, <i>Choristoneura fumiferana</i> (Clem.), outbreak spread requires understanding the demographic processes occurring in low, but rising populations. For the first time, detailed observations were made in the early stages of outbreak development. We sampled populations over a three-year period in both treated and untreated populations in the Lower St-Lawrence region of Quebec, Canada, and measured the density-dependence of survival and population growth rates, and the impact of natural enemies and insecticides. Insecticides tested were <i>Bacillus thuringiensis</i> (Berliner 1915) and tebufenozide. We recorded strong density-dependence of survival between early larval stages and adult emergence, explained largely by the variation of natural enemy impacts and overcrowding. We also observed inverse density-dependence of apparent fecundity: net immigration into lower-density populations and net emigration from the higher, linked to a threshold of ~25% defoliation. Because of high migration rates, none of the 2013 treatments reduced egg populations at the end of summer. However lower migration activity in 2014 allowed population growth to be reduced in treated plots. This evidence lends support to the conclusion that, for a budworm population to increase to outbreak density, it must be elevated via external perturbations, such as immigration, above a threshold density of ~4 larvae per branch tip (L<sub>4</sub>). Once a population has increased beyond this threshold, it can continue growing and itself become a source of further spread by moth migration. These findings imply that populations can be brought down by insecticide applications to a density where mortality from natural enemies can keep the reduced population in check, barring subsequent immigration. While we recognize that other factors may occasionally cause a population to exceed the Allee threshold and reach outbreak level, the preponderance of immigration implies that if all potential sources of significant numbers of moths are reduced on a regional scale by insecticide applications, a widespread outbreak can be prevented, stopped or slowed down by reducing the supply of migrating moths.https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/10/9/748spruce budworm<i>Choristoneura fumiferana</i>forest protectionearly intervention strategysurvivalapparent fecundityimmigrationgrowth ratetreatment thresholdinsecticides
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jacques Régnière
Barry J. Cooke
Ariane Béchard
Alain Dupont
Pierre Therrien
spellingShingle Jacques Régnière
Barry J. Cooke
Ariane Béchard
Alain Dupont
Pierre Therrien
Dynamics and Management of Rising Outbreak Spruce Budworm Populations
Forests
spruce budworm
<i>Choristoneura fumiferana</i>
forest protection
early intervention strategy
survival
apparent fecundity
immigration
growth rate
treatment threshold
insecticides
author_facet Jacques Régnière
Barry J. Cooke
Ariane Béchard
Alain Dupont
Pierre Therrien
author_sort Jacques Régnière
title Dynamics and Management of Rising Outbreak Spruce Budworm Populations
title_short Dynamics and Management of Rising Outbreak Spruce Budworm Populations
title_full Dynamics and Management of Rising Outbreak Spruce Budworm Populations
title_fullStr Dynamics and Management of Rising Outbreak Spruce Budworm Populations
title_full_unstemmed Dynamics and Management of Rising Outbreak Spruce Budworm Populations
title_sort dynamics and management of rising outbreak spruce budworm populations
publisher MDPI AG
series Forests
issn 1999-4907
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Management of spruce budworm, <i>Choristoneura fumiferana</i> (Clem.), outbreak spread requires understanding the demographic processes occurring in low, but rising populations. For the first time, detailed observations were made in the early stages of outbreak development. We sampled populations over a three-year period in both treated and untreated populations in the Lower St-Lawrence region of Quebec, Canada, and measured the density-dependence of survival and population growth rates, and the impact of natural enemies and insecticides. Insecticides tested were <i>Bacillus thuringiensis</i> (Berliner 1915) and tebufenozide. We recorded strong density-dependence of survival between early larval stages and adult emergence, explained largely by the variation of natural enemy impacts and overcrowding. We also observed inverse density-dependence of apparent fecundity: net immigration into lower-density populations and net emigration from the higher, linked to a threshold of ~25% defoliation. Because of high migration rates, none of the 2013 treatments reduced egg populations at the end of summer. However lower migration activity in 2014 allowed population growth to be reduced in treated plots. This evidence lends support to the conclusion that, for a budworm population to increase to outbreak density, it must be elevated via external perturbations, such as immigration, above a threshold density of ~4 larvae per branch tip (L<sub>4</sub>). Once a population has increased beyond this threshold, it can continue growing and itself become a source of further spread by moth migration. These findings imply that populations can be brought down by insecticide applications to a density where mortality from natural enemies can keep the reduced population in check, barring subsequent immigration. While we recognize that other factors may occasionally cause a population to exceed the Allee threshold and reach outbreak level, the preponderance of immigration implies that if all potential sources of significant numbers of moths are reduced on a regional scale by insecticide applications, a widespread outbreak can be prevented, stopped or slowed down by reducing the supply of migrating moths.
topic spruce budworm
<i>Choristoneura fumiferana</i>
forest protection
early intervention strategy
survival
apparent fecundity
immigration
growth rate
treatment threshold
insecticides
url https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/10/9/748
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