Why are there so many beetles right now?
Mountain pine beetle are a natural part of the southern Rocky Mountain ecosystem and have
historically existed at endemic levels. This means that there is a normal,
small population that is prevented from getting too large by natural factors
like climate, predation and fire. Decades of fire suppression and climatic
warming trends have helped beetle populations grow from endemic to epidemic
proportions.
Dr. Allan Carroll of the Canadian Forest Service explains why:
"Pine forests in general, and in particular lodgepole pine forests, are historically
of fire origin. Normally, these forests burn down and regrow and in fact they
do it with a fair amount of frequency. We expect lodgepole pine, on average,
to burn down and regrow every hundred or so years on a long, broad average. This has been a very effective
thing and in fact it has made sure that the forest has been very variable
over time because this means that bits and pieces of the forest burn down
and regrow and as a consequence, we don’t have a lot of old pine. Now,
this is where the mountain pine beetle enters the scenario, because what has happened is through
our own fire suppression techniques, we have taken forest fire largely out
of the equation and allowed the forest to grow and become old over large areas;
and as a consequence, this means that mountain pine beetle has got a large food source because
it likes old trees. So, given that we’ve taken forest fire out of the
picture, it means that we’ve made a lot more food for the mountain pine beetle."
Mount Norquay 1902 in Banff National Park.
© Detroit Photo (1902) |
Mount Norquay slopes with significant vegetation expansion due to fire suppression.
© Cliff White (1984) |
Forest Fires in Kootenay National Park.
© Parks Canada / Brad White |
The role of fire
Beetles thrive on mature, large pine trees. Partly as a result of fire suppression,
large patches of mature pine forests now dominate the landscape. Left to burn,
fires tend to create a mosaic of forest patches of various species, ages and
densities.