
2001 Forest
Insect and Disease
Conditions for the Southern
Region
Note: bold hypertext
links within the narratives (e.g., Dogwood Anthracnose)
will take visitors to the on-line publication, The Health of Southern
Forests that displays additional graphics and discusses the biology
and southern history of the causal agent in more detail. Not all causal
agents are linked. Non-bolded links provide for within-document
navigation.
Most Significant
Conditions in Brief
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Drought continued
to be a significant stress factor across much of the region in 2001, although
rainfall across Arkansas, Texas, and northern Florida in the second half
of the year began to ease moisture deficits in these areas. By December,
standing water could be found in roadside ditches in Florida for the first
time in four years. The region experienced no continental hurricanes in
2001, although tropical storms contributed to water table recharge in
Texas and Florida. Other storm damage was scattered and relatively light.
The southern pine
beetle epidemic in the Southern Appalachians, the Piedmont of Alabama
and the Carolinas, and northern Florida continued to cause serious losses,
fueled both by lingering drought and by the sheer weight of beetle population
numbers. The Appalachian epidemic included unusual attacks on red spruce,
eastern hemlock, and even eastern red cedar. The Florida epidemic was
especially costly in urban and suburban landscapes, where both the high
property value of the infested trees and the expense of removing them
in the proximity of streets, utility lines, homes, and other structures
made control efforts difficult. In the Southern Appalachians, depressed
softwood markets prevented salvage and sanitation harvesting from being
used as a control strategy in many areas.
The red oak borer
epidemic and associated oak decline and mortality in north central Arkansas
astonished entomologists and alarmed the general public with its intensity
and severity. The worst previous attacks seen by this insect had produced
infestations of no more than five borers per tree; the current outbreak
has produced attacks reaching levels of five borers per square foot of
tree bark surface. Degrade from larval galleries rendered much of the
timber worthless except as fuel wood. Although some connection to the
protracted regional drought appears likely, no direct cause for the unprecedented
expansion of the borer population has been discovered.
Gypsy moth populations
in Virginia made a sudden move southwestward by some 50 miles into previously
non-infested territory. This event was the result of a combination of
the existence of several small isolated populations in advance of the
primary edge of the infestation and the occurrence of nearly two weeks
of strong northeast winds at the time of first instar moth larval “balooning.”
This unusual spring weather carried larvae well forward of the infestation
front, and raised concerns over a possible failure of the current “slow-the-spread”
strategy. Declining influence of the Entomophaga maimaiga fungus
on moth populations, believed to be the result of the suppressing influence
of dry weather on fungal growth, also accelerated the growth of moth populations.
Hemlock wooly adelgid
populations also made a dramatic move southwestward through North Carolina
and into upstate South Carolina. This expansion puts both native hemlock
species at risk of rapid extirpation throughout most of the Southern Appalachian
region, with serious ecological consequences.
Status of
Forest Insects
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Baldcypress
Leafroller,
Archips goyerana (formerly
reported as fruittree leafroller, A. argyrospila)
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Louisiana
Hosts: Baldcypress
In 2001, 110.000
acres of mixed baldcypress stands in southern and southeastern Louisiana
were defoliated by the baldcypress leafroller. Approximately 53,000 acres
were severely defoliated (>50%). The predominant impact of this defoliation
is loss of radial growth, although dieback and scattered mortality occurred
in some areas in Assumption, St. James and St. Martin Parishes. Permanently
flooded areas are most severely impacted.
Black turpentine
beetle,
Dendroctonus terebrans
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Regionwide
Hosts: Loblolly pine,
longleaf pine, slash pine, shortleaf pine
Again in 2001, summer
drought throughout the eastern South resulted in higher-than-normal black
turpentine beetle activity. Areas of exception were Mississippi,
Tennessee and Texas. In West Tennessee, populations were notably lower
than last year. In Georgia, some of the most intense activity was noted
in thinned loblolly plantations. This insect is most evident in trees
stressed by drought, logging injury, root compaction, and similar disturbance.
Buck moth,
Hemileuca maia
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Louisiana and Virginia
Hosts: Live oak and
other hardwoods
Buck moth defoliation
of live oak has been a problem in New Orleans for a number of years. It
continues to be locally abundant in the city and of particular concern
in the Federal Historic Districts. The insect population was found to
be decreasing in 2001; pheromone trapping recovered only 1.3 moths/trap
as compared to 2.8 in 2000. In Virginia, populations routinely fluctuate
considerably, and were at locally high densities in 2001.
Fall cankerworm,
Alsophila pometeria
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Tennessee, North
Carolina and Virginia
Hosts: Various oak
species
In East Tennessee,
the fall cankerworm, in association with the green fruitworm and oak leaf
tiers, defoliated about 200 acres of upland hardwood in Monroe County.
Additional defoliation was reported in two counties near Knoxville. In
North Carolina, populations in the Charlotte area, consistently very heavy
in recent years, were low in 2001. Likewise, Virginia populations were
relatively low in 2001.
Forest tent
caterpillar,
Malacosoma disstria
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Louisiana, North
Carolina, South Carolina and Texas
Hosts: Tupelo gum,
upland hardwoods
Defoliation occurred
on 112,000 acres of forested wetlands in Ascention, Livingston, St. James
and St. John Parishes in southeastern Louisiana. This defoliation was
severe (50%) on 38,000 acres. In North Carolina, 40,000 acres were defoliated
along the Roanoke River, with 500 acres classified as “heavily defoliated.”
In South Carolina, 169,000 acres were again defoliated in 2001 in the
Congaree, Santee, Pee Dee, and Wacamaw River basins.
Giant bark
aphids,
Longistigma caryae
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Texas
Hosts: Oaks
In December 2001,
an unusual outbreak of the giant bark aphid began across most of East
Texas and persisted into 2002. This aphid is known to occur in the eastern
half of the U.S. and is the largest aphid in North America. The aphids
are primarily feeding on oak trees and seem to favor water and live oaks.
Aphids suck plant juices and excrete large quantities of honeydew, a clear,
sticky, sugary liquid. An unsightly gray-black sooty mold often grows
on the honeydew. Even with large numbers of aphids present, their feeding
is not expected to cause serious harm to the trees.
Nantucket
pine tip moth,
Rhyacionia frustrana
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]
Regionwide
Hosts: Loblolly pine,
shortleaf pine
Tip moth problems
were noteworthy in Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and South Carolina.
North Carolina infestations were classified as “moderate”
this year. Consistent with last year’s report, Virginia populations
seem to have evolved into a persistent problem in the coastal plain and
piedmont. South Carolina populations were again high, especially in 3-5
year-old plantations on old agricultural sites. About 8,500 acres in South
Carolina were reported infested, with some areas exhibiting 100% infestation
rates. In Tennessee, an unusual fourth generation was reported in
the north-central part of the state. Significant damage was also reported
from West Tennessee on loblolly pine seedlings. Mississippi experienced
large acreages of tip moth damage in Grenada and Holmes Counties. Infestation
levels in Texas have been static since 1999, with some isolated areas
having as much as 75% tip infestation.
Oak leaf
tier,
Croesia semipurpurana
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]
Florida, Tennessee
Hosts: various oak
species
In Florida, a March
outbreak of the oak leaf tier in two heavily people-populated areas (St.
Petersburg and Deland) caused extensive defoliation. While there appears
to be no significant harm to the trees, concern by the public generated
many calls to extension service and state forestry agency personnel. As
noted above, oak leaf tiers were also a component of a multi-species
defoliator outbreak in East Tennessee.
Pine colaspis
beetle,
Colaspis pini
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Regionwide
Hosts: Southern pines
This beetle caused
localized defoliation to pine plantations in central Louisiana, particularly
eastern Rapides Parish, in 2001. No significant damage occurred, but defoliation
is unsightly, causing landowner concerns.
Pine engraver
beetle,
Ips calligraphus,
I. grandicollis, I. avulsus
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]
Regionwide
Hosts: Loblolly pine,
shortleaf pine, slash pine
Another year of drought
contributed to high populations of Ips beetles throughout much
of the region. The heaviest impact was in Florida, Southeast Georgia,
and South Carolina. Florida losses again were exceptionally high compared
to the norm, and were often associated with other stress factors such
as overstocking, root compaction, and poor soils. In South Carolina,
Ips infestations were often associated with southern pine beetle
(SPB), and Ips spots were at first often mis-identified as SPB
infestations during aerial surveys. Ground checks proved otherwise. North
Carolina infestations were worst in the mountains, foothills, and western
piedmont, especially on dry sites. As in South Carolina, infestations
were often mixed in with southern pine beetle. Virginia reported slightly
elevated population densities in 2001. Nevertheless, Tennessee witnessed
a noteworthy decline in Ips populations, especially in the middle
part of the state, where abundant rainfall apparently helped increase
stand vigor and resistance to beetle attack. Poulations also declined
somewhat in Louisiana, with 48 large multiple-tree spots detected. In
addition, hundreds of single-tree or small spots were scattered across
the state. Very low levels of engraver beetle activity were reported in
Mississippi, and levels in Arkansas and Texas dropped dramatically from
2000 with a return to more normal rainfall.
Pine sawflies,
Neodiprion sp.,
Diprion sp.
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Arkansas, Florida,
Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee, Texas,Virginia
Hosts: Southern pines
Populations of the
loblolly pine sawfly (Neodiprion taedae linearis) were up in southern
Arkansas with heavy defoliation in parts of Brady, Calhoun, Dallas and
Union Counties. Tennessee noted that populations of this species increased
in scattered areas across the north-central part of the state, but were
at lower levels than reported in 2000 in the west. Black-headed sawflies
(N. excitans) defoliated a 60-acre tract in George County, Mississippi,
and there were occasional reports from other areas of that state. Defoliation
declined significantly in Louisiana, with only scattered occurrences reported
from older plantations in Caldwell, Jackson, LaSalle and Winn Parishes.
In North Carolina, there were several reported outbreaks of this species
in northeastern counties in 12-20 year-old pine plantations. Florida recorded
another year of redheaded pine sawfly (N. lecontei) activity, but
infestations were far less significant compared to those of the year 2000.
Most damage again occurred in young (<15 years) longleaf and slash
pine plantations. Tennessee also reported scattered, but increased populations
of the redheaded pine sawfly across the state. In the North Carolina mountains
, there were drought related outbreaks of Diprion similis, the
introduced pine sawfly.
Red oak borer,
Enaphalodes rufulus
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Arkansas, South Carolina,
Georgia
Hosts: Northern red
oak, black oak
Red oak borer attacks
continued at extremely high levels in 2001 in north central Arkansas in
association with oak decline initiated by severe drought in 1998-2000.
Populations are now at unprecedented levels. Damage contributed to drought-related
mortality in red oaks, and degrade in lumber from attacked trees sharply
reduced product values. Mortality, especially in red oaks, is now at unprecedented
levels, and there is great concern about the impacts on oak forests across
the state. Red oak borer adults emerged in 2001, and with a two-year life
cycle will infest trees until re-emerging in 2003. In central Louisiana,
some red oak borer activity was noted in conjunction with oak decline
in bottomland hardwoods. The borer attacked red and scarlet oak in the
piedmont of South Carolina. In combination with drought stress, it contributed
to some mortality. Georgia also reported problems with the red oak borer
(and other borers) associated with the drought and trees growing on poor
sites.
Reproduction
weevils,
Hylobius pales, Pachylobius
picivorous
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North Carolina, South
Carolina, Texas
Hosts: Southern pines
Weeviling contributed
to the loss of 1,050 acres of newly-planted pines in the South Carolina
coastal plain. In North Carolina, damage generally remained light to moderate
throughout the state, with only limited scattered heavy infestations.
Weevil activity remained low in Texas during 2001, probably because most
plantings were replantings of stands where seedlings were killed during
the recent drought (delayed planting ameliorates weevil damage risk).
Southern
pine beetle,
Dendroctonus frontalis
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]
Regionwide
Hosts: Loblolly pine,
shortleaf pine, slash pine, longleaf pine, Virginia pine, eastern white
pine
In 2001, southern
pine beetle (SPB) populations countinued at very high levels in
the Southern Region. The extended drought exacerbated the SPB situation
by providing optimum habitat for this native forest pest. The outbreak
covered portions of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi,
North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia on federal, State
and private ownerships (map showing counties
in southern pine beetle outbreak status). It will be recorded
as one of the largest outbreaks in history. On the contrary there
was not even a single SPB infestation in the entire states of Louisiana,
Texas, Arkansas and Oklahoma. Compared to 2000, the number of SPB
infestations in the Southern Region remained virtually constant (60,628
spots to 58,839 spots) as did the number outbreak acres. (chart
showing southern pine beetle infestations for 2000-2001 -- text-only
data. Also see table below.)
|
Table
1. Southern Pine Beetle Infestations by State 2000 versus 2001
|
|
State
|
2000
|
2001
|
Percent
Difference
|
|
Alabama
|
26,407
|
11,945
|
-54.77
|
|
Arkansas
|
-
|
0
|
0.00
|
|
Florida
|
1,172
|
2,892
|
146.76
|
|
Georgia
|
2,582
|
2,604
|
0.85
|
|
Kentucky
|
1,664
|
3,513
|
111.12
|
|
Louisiana
|
-
|
0
|
0.00
|
|
Mississippi
|
809
|
137
|
-83.06
|
|
N.
Carolina
|
2,219
|
3,860
|
52.50
|
|
Oklahoma
|
-
|
0
|
0.00
|
|
S.
Carolina
|
12,996
|
22,149
|
70.43
|
|
Tennessee
|
9,352
|
12,766
|
36.51
|
|
Texas
|
-
|
0
|
0.00
|
|
Virginia
|
1,638
|
762
|
-53.48
|
|
Totals
|
58,839
|
60,628
|
3.04
|
The southern Appalachian
Mountain area from southwestern Virginia and southern Kentucky to eastern
Tennessee, western North and South Carolina to northern Georgia was devastated.
SPB attacked hosts other than its favored southern yellow pines.
Eastern white pine was commonly killed, and significant infestaions occurred
in Norway and red spruce at the higher elevations. Suppression of
individual SPB infestations was limited by poor markets and lack of accessibility.
Many infestations were hundreds of acres in size.
In Virginia over
270,000 trees killed by SPB in 762 infestations across 15 counties (10
of which were in outbreak status). Kentucky also reported another
very bad SPB year, with 3,513 infestations tallied in 45 counties, 41
of which were in outbreak status. Most losses were in the drought-ravaged
mountains, with impacts greatest on south-facing slopes and shallow soils.
A large number of white pines have also been lost in Kentucky –
so much so that the log home industry, and important source of employment
in many rural areas, has been severely affected.
In Tennessee, beetle
populations began to decline in the Southern Appalachians, but the losses
over the past 2 years have been devastating. More abundant
rainfall reversed the three-year pattern of summer and fall droughts.
Nevertheless, there were more spots east of Nashville and north of Knoxville.
In North Carolina,
there was a 98% percent increase in infestations over year 2000 (1,951
to 3,871). While activity decreased slightly in the mountains, losses
in the western piedmont and foothills more than offset this improvement.
In all, 32 North Carolina counties were infested, with 22 classified in
outbreak status North Carolina foresters and botanists expressed
concern about the loss of low population tree species such as table mountain
pine and red spruce. Because of poor markets, only 5% of trees were
salvaged.
In South Carolina,
financial loses reached $76 million – the second worst year of financial
loses on record. Most SPB activity was confined to the western piedmont,
foothills, and mountains where 19 counties were in outbreak status.
Very poor salvage markets hampered effective control.
Alabama remained
a hot spot for beetle activity, the state’s third straight year
for epidemic populations. Statewide 11,945 spots were detected statewide
with 45 counties considered epidemic. This is a reduction from the record
setting 26,407 in 2000, but still is a very level of activity.
Florida's nightmare
year of 2000 actually grew much worse in 2001. The state's problems
were compounded by infestations throughout much of the wildland-urban
interface (e.g., the Gainesville-Alachua County area) that took the brunt
of much of the outbreak. The situation was aggravated by drought and poor
salvage markets. Beetle activity and associated problems were so severe,
widespread, and intense, that the Florida Commissioner of Agriculture
declared the situation an “incident,” and convened a task
force to address the problem. Unprecedented infestations occurred in Lake
Orange, Seminole, Sumter, and Volusia Counties – none of which had
any previous record of SPB infestations. Nine counties in central and
northeastern Florida were epidemic, more than twice the number ever previously
experienced. In all, Florida recorded 2,892 infestations in 34 counties.
Some 3.5 million trees were lost at an estimated cost of $38.4 million.
Georgia reported
28 counties epidemic in the northern part of the state. Inaccessibility
and poor wood markets complicated salvage efforts. Georgia recorded 4,863
spots in 2001.
In western Gulf States,
beetle populations remained low. Mississippi detected only 137 spots statewide,
and no spots were detected in Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas.
Texas leaf-cutting
ant,
Atta texana
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]
Louisiana, Texas
Hosts: Southern pines
and hardwoods
In 2001, localized
defoliation of pine plantations occurred in east Texas and west central
Louisiana on sites with deep sandy soil. Populations of these ants remain
fairly static from year to year. A new ant bait, VolcanoŽ, was registered
for use in Texas in 1999 and in Louisiana in 2000 and provides excellent
control. A single application can eliminate an ant colony in as little
as four weeks.
Truncated
true Katydid,
Paracryptophyllus
robustus
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]
Texas
Host: Post oak
In July 2001, about
500 acres of post oak forest in Lee County, Texas were defoliated by an
unusual outbreak of the truncated true katydid. Trees suffered little
from this defoliation.
Variable
oak leaf caterpillar,
Lochmaeus manteo
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]
Florida
Hosts: oak
In 2001, the variable
oak leaf caterpillar again caused thousands of acres of defoliation during
July and August in three Florida counties (Gilchrest, Suwanee and Columbia).
While there is not evidence of mortality, the damage generated many calls
by concerned landowners to extension agents and foresters.
Asian longhorned
beetle,
Anoplophora glabripennis
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]
Texas
Hosts: Hardwoods
An adult beetle was
collected inside a warehouse at the Port of Houston in 2000. Intensive
surveys of vegetation in the vicinity of the warehouse in 2001 revealed
no evidence of infestation. USDA Animal and Plant Inspection Service personnel
conduct detailed inspections of wood packing material from China to find
and prevent accidental introduction of this unwanted wood boring beetle.
Balsam woolly
adelgid,
Adelges picea
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]
North Carolina, Tennessee,
Virginia
Host: Fraser
fir
Fraser fir has a
very limited range in the southern Appalachian Mountains (map
showing spruce/fir distribution) and appears almost exclusively in
pure stands on the highest mountain peaks or in combination with red spruce
at somewhat lower elevations. Since the first introduction of the
balsam woolly adelgid, approximately 64,700 acres of Fraser fir have been
affected. The insect attacks trees of all age classes, but prefers
the older fir trees. Adelgid populations were again high in 2001.
Gypsy moth
(European),
Lymantria dispar
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]
Arkansas, Georgia,
North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia
Hosts: Hardwoods,
especially oak species
In 2001, aerial surveys
detected over 440,000 acres of defoliation by gypsy moth in Virginia (map
showing gypsy moth defoliation area). Populations were highly
variable due in part to continued drought, the effects of an Entomophaga
maimaiga fungal outbreak and the gypsy moth nucleopolyhedrosis virus.
Gypsy moth populations noticeably increased in the central and eastern
portions of the State. Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer
Services (VDACS) conducted aerial suppression activities on approximately
35,000 acres in 2001. With the increase in populations in 2001,
the potential for defoliation is greater next year. Treatments are
planned for approximately 65,000 acres in 2002.
2001 trapping information
in North Carolina revealed no new infestations. Delimiting trapping
of the pheromone flake eradication blocks treated in 2000(Clay, Jackson,
and McDowell counties in western North Carolina) caught several single
moth captures in each of the blocks. Final delimiting trapping for
these blocks will be completed in 2002. No moths were captured in
2001, the final year for the delimiting trapping of the 23,000- acre pheromone
flake eradication treatment (1999) in and around Highlands, NC and a portion
of Georgia. North Carolina has no treatments planned in 2002.
In Tennessee, two
more counties have been added to the list of infested counties (Monroe
and Campbell) making a total of 5 infested counties in the State (Scott,
Cumberland, Sevier, Monroe and Campbell). As a result of an increase
in trap captures, an aerial treatment is proposed for Campbell county
(8,500 acres) and ground treatments are proposed for Monroe and Scott
counties in 2002. Follow-up trapping will continue in Cumberland
and Scott counties where ground treatments were conducted in 2001.
In Arkansas, delimiting
trapping was successful in eradicating moths from Carroll and Marion counties
in 2000. Delimiting trapping in Newton County caught 3 moths in a single
trap. The 80 square mile detection trapping area surrounding the
delimiting area revealed no trap catches. As a result of the trapping
in 2001, this area will be reduced, in 2002, to cover a 5 square mile
area for delimit trapping. Additional detection trapping across the state
produced four moths near Mountain View in separate traps, two were caught
near Hot Springs, and two near Camden. No treatments are planned.
The Slow the Spread
Project (STS) conducted aerial treatments in seven states. Within
the boundaries of the Southern Region, 1,200 acres were treated in eastern
North Carolina and 65,000 acres were treated in eastern and western Virginia.
STS treatments are planned for Virginia in 2002; however, no treatments
are planned for North Carolina.
Hemlock woolly
adelgid,
Adelges tsugae
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]
North Carolina and
Virginia
Hosts: Eastern
and Carolina hemlock
Populations of the
hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA) increased alarmingly in 2001 (map
showing hemlock woolly adelgid occurrence by county -- text-only
data). This insect threatens the entire range of eastern hemlock,
and is found throughout Virginia wherever hemlock is abundant with the
exception of 6 counties in the southwestern portion of the state. In North
Carolina, eleven new counties were reported infested with the HWA in 2001—Ashe,
Burke, Caldwell, Graham, Jackson, Macon, Mitchell, Swain, Watauga and
Yancey—constituting a major population movement southwestward. An
established population was also found in Oconee County, South Carolina
near the Chattooga River, and infestations are believed to already be
established in neighboring Rabun County, Georgia. Because of the strong
influence of spring northward-migrating songbirds in spreading this insect,
the entire range of Carolina hemlock (Tsuga caroliniana) is now
at risk, and this species could be extirpated from the wild within as
little as five years. Eastern hemlock (T. canadensis), an important
riparian and midle-elevation wildlife habitiat component, is also now
at risk of extirpation throughout the Southern Appalchians.
Pink hibiscus
mealybug,
Maconellicoccus hirsutus
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]
Puerto Rico, Virgin
Islands
Hosts: Hibiscus
and many other species
The pink hibiscus
mealybug (PHM) continued to spread in 2001, and has now reached over two-dozen
Caribbean Islands. It was detected in Puerto Rico in 1997, but has
been confined to the eastern region. Frequent monitoring surveys
are conducted, assisted by the Digital Arborist. To date, no
infestations have been identified on the Caribbean National Forest.
It appears that parasitoids may have been introduced simultaneously with
the mealybug, reducing the impacts in Puerto Rico. With support
from the Digital Arborist and Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service,
the Puerto Rico Department of Agriculture continues to rear and release
parasitoids. Surveys continue to show that population reductions
of 85-90 percent have been achieved at the parasite release sites. Because
of the large number of known host species in Florida, extension agents
continue to carefully monitor for this pest. Fortunately, the PHM has
not been detected there.
Status of
Forest Diseases
Annosus root
disease,
Heterobasidion annosum
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]
Regionwide (map
showing annosus hazard rating)
Hosts: Southern pines
In Georgia, annosus
root disease has increased throughout the state on high hazard
sites in older Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) plantations that have
been thinned. Similarly in South Carolina, annosus was troublesome on
CRP sites, with 17 industrial landowners requesting evaluations by the
South Carolina Forestry Commission in 2001. The Commission recommended
clearcutting and replanting 1,500 acres.
Fusiform
rust,
Cronartium quercuum
f. sp. fusiforme
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]
Regionwide
Hosts: Southern pines,
especially loblolly and slash pines
Fusiform rust is
the most damaging disease of loblolly and slash pine in the South. Other
pine species may also be infected, but little damage or mortality occurs.
An estimated 13.8 million acres of loblolly and slash pine have at least
10 percent of the trees infected. Georgia is the most heavily impacted
state, with 4.6 million acres (49 percent of host type) affected.
Exceptionally dry weather over much of the eastern South over the last
2-3 years should have resulted in lower-than-normal levels of new infections
in young pines, but slow symptom development has prevented verification
of this effect.
Littleleaf
disease,
Phytopthora cinnamomi
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]
Virginia, North Carolina,
South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky
Hosts: Loblolly and
shortleaf pines
Littleleaf disease
continues to cause growth loss and mortality across the Piedmont areas
of the affected states. Shortleaf pine is highly susceptible while
loblolly pine is affected, but at a later age. Many of the stands
that were converted from shortleaf to loblolly to reduce the impact of
this disease are now reaching their age of susceptibility. These
stands are often attacked by bark beetles after being weakened by the
root infection.
Some moderation of
littleleaf symptoms over time has been reported. It is believed that root
penetration of soil hardpans and gradual increases in soil porosity due
to increasing biological activity on severely eroded sites will gradually
reduce the impact of this disease over a period of a century or more.
Oak wilt,
Ceratocystis fagacearum
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]
North Carolina, Tennessee,
Virginia
Hosts: Live and red
oaks
Oak wilt continues
to be a devastating tree killer in 60 central Texas counties. Urban, suburban
and rural oaks are affected. Live oak is a premier shade tree species
in the region and is highly valued for beauty, shade and wildlife benefits.
The Texas Forest Service completed a fourteenth year of cooperative suppression
of the disease. Since this project’s inception, more than 2.7 million
feet (>525 miles) of barrier trenches have been installed on more than
2,000 oak wilt infection centers in 34 counties. Oak wilt foresters with
the Texas Forest Service conducted aerial surveys for oak wilt infection
centers over about 658.400 acres in central Texas in 2001.
There was mixed oak
wilt activity in the eastern South in 2001. Aerial surveys in Tennessee
showed no activity at all in the Cumberland Plateau (Cumberland, Putnam,
and White Coutnies). In North Carolina too, activity was down markedly.
The North Carolina Division of Forest Resources reported 20 oak wilt infection
centers involving 24 trees in Buncombe and Haywood Counties in the mountains.
In contrast, Virginia reported a slight increase in oak wilt-causd mortality.
Beech bark
disease,
Nectria coccinea var.
faginata
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]
North Carolina, Tennessee,
Virginia
Hosts: American
beech
Beech bark disease
was not found in any additional counties in 2001, but the disease continues
to intensify within currently affected areas (map
showing beech bark disease occurrence by county -- text-only
data). Tree mortality continues to intensify in Tennessee along the
Appalachian Trail and in Blount, Cocke, and Sevier Counties within the
Great Smoky Mountains National Park. The disease has intensified at a
faster rate than predicted, and is spreading downslope toward the Cherokee
National Forest.
Dutch elm
disease,
Ophiostoma ulmi
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Regionwide
Hosts: American elm
Localized mortality
continues to occur at low severity level in urban and wild populations
of elm. North Carolina reported a number of scattered incidents of the
disease in 2001.
Butternut
canker,
Sirococcus clavigigenti-juglandacearum
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Regionwide
Hosts: Butternut
This disease has
been in the South for at least 40 years and is believed to have killed
3 of every 4 butternuts in North Carolina and Virginia (map
showing butternut canker occurrence by county -- text-only
data). The fungus kills trees of all ages. Butternut canker is expected
to spread and kill most of the resource, including regeneration. The species
will be replaced by other species on these sites (e.g., black walnut).
It is too early to predict the benefits of selection and breeding on developing
resistance to the disease, but trees exhibiting resistance have been found
in Arkansas, North Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky and Virginia.
Dogwood anthracnose,
Discula destructiva
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Alabama, Georgia,
Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virgina
Host: Flowering dogwood
While no new counties
were reported infected in the eastern portion of the South in 2001 (map
showing dogwood anthracnose occurrence by county -- text-only
data), South Carolina and North Carolina report increased mortality
caused by dogwood anthracnose
(DWA) in previously infected areas. North Carolina impact plots established
in 1981 now show an average of 56% DWA-caused mortality. Further west,
Logan County, Kentucky was reported as a new infection site.
Pitch canker,
Fusarium subglutinans
f. sp. pini
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Regionwide
Hosts: Southern pines
Only scattered trees
across the Region are infected, but impacts can be locally significant.
In Georgia, and South Carolina, pitch canker continues to be associated
with pine plantations near chicken and turkey houses. The ammonia
released from the brood houses creates conditions on the trees conducive
to infection. The damage is usually confined to the area within the plantation
nearest exhaust fans. All species of pine (slash, longleaf, and
loblolly) are affected. Poultry houses are becoming a common sight
throughout the coastal plain of Georgia. Thus, problems with pitch
canker are expected to increase, especially during droughts. Similar
problems have been noted in North Carolina when chicken waste has been
used as fertilizer in pine plantations. In Texas, about 10 percent of
the cone crop in state seed orchards was affected by pitch canker in both
2000 and 2001.
Oak decline,
abiotic and biotic influences
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Regionwide
Hosts: Oaks, other
hardwoods
The severe summer
drought of 1998- 2000 continued into 2001. Oak
decline was severe in the southern Appalachian Mountains, with
North Carolina and Virginia incurring heavy losses on south-facing slopes.
Similarly, Tennessee noted increased loss of both red and white oak, with
white oaks especially hard hit. In Georgia, oak mortality was heaviest
on rocky ridges and side slopes in the mountains. Drought is just
one component of oak decline, a syndrome resulting in dieback and mortality
of dominant and co-dominant mature oaks. Other causal factors including
frost, defoliation by insects (including the gypsy moth), secondary pests
such as Armillaria root disease and two-lined chestnut borer, and Hypoxylon
canker. Oak decline and gypsy moth have been shown to interact:
severe defoliation by gypsy moth can induce oak decline in previously
unaffected areas; and, in areas of pre-existing oak decline, defoliation
by gypsy moth causes increased mortality. Host tree age and site
conditions also play a role. Oak decline is on the rise in Tennessee,
but at a lower rate of increase than in 2000. This syndrome is believed
to have caused 2% mortality in some southwest Tennessee counties. Impact
in 2001 was exacerbated by drought, which caused its greatest impact on
dry, south-facing slopes. The syndrome is frequently associated with Hypoxylon
canker, especially in western and middle Tennessee.
Drought initiated
oak decline of unprecedented magnitude in Arkansas. Particularly impacted
were the Ozark and Ouachita Mountains, where widespread red oak mortality
occurred, aggravated by red oak borer activity (see Native Insects, Red
oak borer). Mortality levels will have severe impacts on oak ecosystems;
and are having severe impact on oak sawtimber markets.
Seed and
Cone Insects and Diseases
Coneworms,
Dioryctria amatella,
D. clarioralis, D. disclusa, D. merkeli
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Regionwide
Hosts: Southern pines
In 2001, coneworms
continued to cause significant losses to improved seed crops in southern
orchards, primarily loblolly pine. In central Louisiana, a bumper
crop of longleaf pine cones was harvested; however, inventory samples
revealed that 63% of cones infested with and destroyed by coneworms.
Much of this loss occurred between May and July indicating substantial
attacks on maturing cones likely due to D. amatella. Other
samples taken from loblolly orchards in Florida, Texas and Louisiana indicated
losses of 15-70% from coneworm. Losses in unspraed orchards in Texas remained
static at about 35-45%. Losses in treated orchards were considerably less.
Seedbugs,
Leptoglossus corculus,
Tetyra bipunctata
Regionwide
Hosts: Southern
pines
Both species of seedbug
were abundant in southern pine seed orchards. Inventory samples
indicated that seedbugs caused about 25% seed loss in untreated orchards.
In Tennessee, successful control efforts reduced losses to seedbugs to
only 10 pounds of infested seed in 2001.
Pine seedworm,
Cydia spp.
Regionwide
Hosts: Southern pines
Inventories of longleaf
pine in Central Louisiana revealed low, but consistent, seedworm populations.
Estimated loss was 2-3% of seed.
Pine catkin
sawfly,
Xyela spp.
Louisiana, Texas
Hosts: Southern pines
An unusual outbreak
of this small and seldom seen insect occurred in the spring of 2001 on
loblolly pine in central Louisiana and extreme eastern Texas. An
unusually large male flower (catkin) crop likely contributed to the outbreak.
Infestations of mature larvae were observed at orchards and in private
yards under infested trees. Although very abundant, the impact on
pollination was likely insignificant.
Southern
cone gall midge,
Cecidomyia bisitosa
Florida
Hosts: slash pine
For a third consecutive
year, infestations of southern gall midge caused significant losses on
an industrial seed orchard in Nassau County, Florida. Infestation rates
did decline however, from 55% of first year conelets in 2000 to 35% in
2001 based on the average of samples taken from identical ramets of susceptible
clones.
Nursery
Pests
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Rhizoctonia
needle blight,
Rhizoctonia sp.
Regionwide
Hosts: Longleaf
pine seedlings
Losses were reported
from North Carolina in 2001, but not at abnormal levels. Over 50,000
seedlings were lost to this disease in 2001 in South Carolina’s
Taylor State Tree Nursery.
Damping-off,
Fusarium sp.,
Pythium sp., Phomopsis sp., and Phytophthora sp.
Regionwide
Hosts: various species
Damping off is the
most common disease problem facing southern nurseries. Loss of seedlings
to damping-off varies greatly from year to year owing to the interaction
of pathogenic fungi (species of Fusarium, Pythium, Rhizoctonia, and
Phytopthora) and environmental conditions. Seedling losses can be
severe when germination is slow due to cold, wet weather. Losses in 2001
were lower than normal due to the very dry weather which inhibits fungus
development. Fusarium and/or Phytopthora root rot
caused 5-10% losses os sawtooth and Shumard oak in West Tennessee in 2001
(a post-emergence problem). In Virginia, Phomopsis continues to
be a problem on eastern red cedar in Virginia nurseries.
Other
Stressors
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Drought
Regionwide
Hosts: All species
Drought conditions
prevailed over much of the eastern South for the fourth consecutive year.
Georgia suffered
continued drought-caused tree losses. Impacts in nurseries were again
severe, with heavy loss of containerized seedlings recorded.
Florida witnessed
another year of stress related pest activity and associated tree death/damage.
Impact in Florida was especially intense in the northeast. Among the secondary
insects and diseases proliferating in the weakened trees were Ips
beetles, black turpentine beetle, redheaded pine sawfly, Kermes scale,
two-lined chestnut borer, ambrosia beetles, southern pine root weevil
(Hylobius aliradicus), and Hypoxyloncanker.
Similar problems
occurred in South Carolina where the state recorded its third consecutive
20-inch rainfall
defecit year.
Much like last year,
North Carolina reported a host of drought-related problems, especially
in the mountains, foothills, and western Piedmont. Similarly, Virginia
continued to experience drought problems with forests and trees across
the Commonwealth.
Drought was less
intense in Tennessee in 2001 than in the previous three summers, but the
cumulative stress continued to cause mortality in the oak/hickory forest
type.
Drought abated over
much of the western Gulf region in 2001. This may have contributed to
a lessening of drought-initiated dieback and decline in susceptible trees.
Fire
Regionwide
Hosts: All
species
For the fourth year
in a row, fire (both wildfire and prescribed burns) generated a high incidence
of tree mortality in Florida, which was further aggravated by the drought.
Besides outright fire-caused mortality, many trees succumbed to secondary
insects and diseases that exploited the trees’ fire-weakened condition.
North Carolina reported
27,859 acres burned, much of it from October through December.
Tennessee reported
35,000 acres burned in the eastern part of the state. Many of these fires
were arsonist-set in October and November and affected primarily upland
hardwoods.
Air pollution
Tennessee
Hosts: all species
Ozone damage was
very evident in the Cumberland Plateau and the Knoxville area of Tennessee
in 2001.
Frost
Tennessee
Hosts: various species
Scattered frost affected
elm, hackberry, sycamore and cottonwood were reported from upper-middle
Tennessee. Severe frost damage in west and upper middle Tennessee caused
reduced acorn crops, with corresponding negative impact on wildlife species
dependent on acorns for food.
Wind
Tennessee, Virginia
Hosts: Southern pines
and hardwoods
Winds toppled dead
pines onto houses north of Knoxville and uprooted hardwoods in middle
Tennessee. One wind storm swath affecting Coffee and Franklin Counties
was 200 feet wide and three-quarters of a mile long. Tornado caused damage
was reported in Henry County in West Tennessee.
In Virginia, high
winds in combination with hail and flash floods affected Southwestern
Virginia in May and July.
Ice
Arkansas, Oklahoma,
Texas
Hosts: Southern pines
and hardwoods
Although no significant
new ice storms hit the South in 2001, assessment and clean-up of the Christmas
2000 storms across Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas continued through early
2001.
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