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Big
Picture for Small Borers
Researchers take to the
skies to track a puzzling pattern of tree-killing insects.
03/14/07
This
image shows the location of the LIDAR study in the Ozark
National Forest near White Rock Mountain. The researchers
hope to determine patterns in the red oak borer infestation
that may lead to new forest management practices to deal
with the beetles.
Credit:
Jason Tullis
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FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. -
University of Arkansas researchers are using cutting-edge spatial
technologies to study the aftermath of an insect infestation that
has devastated red oak populations in Arkansas and Missouri. By
combining this research with field work, they seek patterns that
might help explain what trees are vulnerable to infestation, thus
helping forestry professionals determine future forest management
practices.
The red oak borer, a
middle-sized, nocturnal brown "long-horned" beetle,
lived in relative obscurity in red oak trees in the Ozark
Mountains until 1999, when forestry professionals and researchers
began noticing oaks dying in droves. When Fred Stephen,
University Professor of entomology, and his students began
examining the trees, they found them filled with borers.
The red oak borers have a
two-year life cycle, spent mostly as larvae that bore into the
heartwood of the host oaks. The larvae carve out galleries in the
wood, chewing through layers of rings in the middle of the tree
and creating small holes.
Most of the time natural
controls on population growth, including the defenses that oaks
mount, successfully combat the larvae. But an unexplained
dramatic increase in larval density -- from an average three or
four to a tree to 70 or 80 in a tree -- led to the deaths of tens
of thousands of trees.
Then in 2005, the red oak borer
population dropped 98 percent, returning to typical levels.
"We're tying to understand
why all of this happened," Stephen said.
Red
Oak Borer
Enaphalodes
rufulus
Family:
Cerambycidae
Size:
Aprox. 45Mm
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This
image shows the image created by millions of points from
LIDAR, a technique the researchers are using to study parts
of the forest affected by red oak borer infestations.
Credit:
Jason Tullis
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To do so, Stephen and
geosciences professor Jason Tullis have taken their research into
the air. Tullis is working with light detection and ranging
(LIDAR), which uses pulses of laser light to accurately map a
forested area of the Ozark National Forest near White Rock
Mountain, where many trees succumbed to red oak borers during the
infestation. The LIDAR instrument, mounted in an airplane, shoots
about 50,000 near-infrared laser pulses per second at the earth.
Depending on the path of a given laser pulse, up to four return
pulses are recorded by the instrument's receiver. In the case of
a typical red oak tree, return pulses originate from leaves,
branches, the trunk and the ground. Using GPS, gyroscopes and
other instrumentation, the location where each LIDAR return pulse
originated is computed, allowing the researchers to study a
three-dimensional "point cloud" representing forest
structure and terrain. This information will be used in
conjunction with field studies to look for patterns that might
provide insight into the origins of the outbreak.
"If we could map the
vulnerability of these ecosystems, we might be able to determine
what areas need extra attention," Stephen said. Practices
such as thinning the forest or changing species composition might
help create forests less vulnerable to such infestations.
"GIS and remote sensing
can help find a pattern, and this can help us understand the
underlying science of the ecosystem," Tullis said.
Tullis is an assistant
professor of geosciences in the J. William Fulbright College of
Arts and Sciences. Stephen is a University Professor of
entomology in the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and
Life Sciences.
Source:
University of Arkansas
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