Beetle Love
How do male and female mountain pine beetle find each other in a pine forest
that is hundreds of square kilometres in size? Beetles use both chemical signals
and sound to attract one another.
Powerful Perfume: How beetles attract one another with scent
Beetles have a sophisticated chemical language that allows them to communicate.
These chemicals are known as “pheromones.” From the host tree,
the mountain pine beetle can emit both an “aggregative pheromone”
that attracts other beetles to the tree, or they can emit an “anti-aggregative
pheromone” that neutralizes the aggregative pheromone. This helps to
avoid the harmful effects of having too many beetles on one tree competing
for resources.
What’s the difference between pheromones and hormones?
Hormones are chemicals that the body produces and releases internally. Pheromones
are chemicals that the body produces and releases externally to communicate
with other organisms.
How do beetles use sound to communicate with one another?
Beetles rub body parts together to create sound. Mountain pine beetle have
a “scraper” on their abdomen that they rub against a grooved surface
on the underside of their left wing cover to create a sound that is not audible
to humans. This is called “stridulating.” Once the female beetles
have arrived on a suitable pine tree host, they begin to stridulate and produce
aggregative pheromones to attract other unmated males and females. New females
arrive and do the same as they land and bore into the tree. As the
males arrive, they enter the galleries that the females have tunnelled, and
begin to stridulate to let the females know they have arrived, and to also warn
others that the female in that gallery is taken. At this point, the female
stops producing aggregative pheromones and starts producing anti-aggregative
pheromone to deter more beetles from coming.
 (A) Scraper
© Malcolm M. Furniss |
 (B) File
© Malcolm M. Furniss |
| Bark beetles of the genus Dendroctonus, including the mountain pine beetle, communicate sonically by means of rubbing a scraper (A) on their abdomen against a file (B) on the inside of their hardened wing cover. The resulting chirping sounds influence mating behaviour. This photo shows the stridulatory mechanism of a related species, the Douglas-fir beetle. |
Love is in the air: how microclimate affects beetle communication
Because beetles use pheromones to communicate, their communication is affected
by the “microclimate” or weather around the host tree. Microclimate
can vary depending on how far the host pine is from other pines, thereby altering
the following factors:
- Temperature and Light: Trees that are farther apart allow
more solar energy into the area around the tree, which means the temperature
around the tree is higher than in a denser stand. Some research shows that
mountain pine beetle are more likely to land and attack a tree under lower
temperatures and light intensities, similar to those found in a typical
pine stand. However, they tend to keep seeking hosts in less dense stands
that allow more light and heat. The longer the beetles are in flight, the
more likely they are to be eaten by predators, or be very low on energy
reserves when they finally do land and begin colonizing a tree.
- Wind: The larger the spaces between pine trees, the more the wind is able
to blow through. This can disrupt the chemical messaging between beetles
by dispersing the pheromones. In addition, mountain pine beetles fly more
slowly in high winds and have more difficulty staying on course.
In addition to the density of pine trees, microclimate can also be affected
by other factors like weather patterns (i.e. warming trends), the smoke from
fires, soil moisture, and other forest plants.