DAILY NEWS Jul 12, 2010 3:23 PM - 1 comment

Cold winter was hard on Alberta's mountain pine beetles

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Edmonton

Cold temperatures last winter and extreme temperature fluctuations this spring combined to cause significant mortality to mountain pine beetles infesting trees in Alberta. Mortality surveys completed by the Government of Alberta show beetles had low survival throughout areas of the province where trees are infested, with the exception of some hot spots in northwest Alberta.
"At the same time, the cold weather did not completely eliminate the beetles and there is still the threat of additional in-flights from British Columbia," says Alberta Sustainable Resource Development Minister Mel Knight.
As well, the Minister explained, the trees the beetles infested before dying are also dead and work must be done to allow regeneration of new forests to replace those lost to attacks.
As a result, the Alberta government is continuing its action plan to minimize the spread of infestations by a variety of methods, including single-tree removals, stand-level harvest and controlled fires.
Considering the 2010 over-winter mortality surveys and the risk of in-flight from B.C. this summer, the government has determined the following areas are a high priority for beetle control: Whitecourt/Slave Lake, Grande Prairie, Banff/Canmore/Kananaskis, Oldman River/Crowsnest Pass.
The Alberta government's objectives are to minimize the spread of beetles north and south along the Eastern Slopes and to prevent beetles from spreading east in the boreal forest.



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Reader Comments

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Jim Roosmann

Please take a look at a website I created to describe and share the approach I used which saved my trees from pine beetles. Rather than trying to kill the pine beetles, I used inexpensive and readily available fungicides to attack the symbiotic blue stain fungus ¿ because the beetles are dependent on that fungus and carry it to every tree they infest. By killing the fungus it saved my trees from the infestation, even trees that were severely infected were able to recover. Please share my information with others that may find it helpful. (I¿m not selling anything, just sharing my story and solution - hoping to save some trees) www.pinebeetlecontrol.com

Posted July 15, 2010 05:29 PM


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