Abstract

The spruce budworm, Choristoneura fumiferana, Clem., is the most significant defoliating pest of boreal balsam fir (Abies balsamea (L.) Mill.) and spruce (Picea sp.) in North America. Historically, spruce budworm outbreaks have been managed via a reactive, foliage protection approach focused on keeping trees alive rather than stopping the outbreak. However, recent theoretical and technical advances have renewed interest in proactive population control to reduce outbreak spread and magnitude, i.e., the Early Intervention Strategy (EIS). In essence, EIS is an area-wide management program premised on detecting and controlling rising spruce budworm populations (hotspots) along the leading edge of an outbreak. In this article, we lay out the conceptual framework for EIS, including all of the core components needed for such a program to be viable. We outline the competing hypotheses of spruce budworm population dynamics and discuss their implications for how we manage outbreaks. We also discuss the practical needs for such a program to be successful (e.g., hotspot monitoring, population control, and cost–benefit analyses), as well as the importance of proactive communications with stakeholders.

Highlights

  • Ecological disturbances such as forest fires and insect outbreaks play a crucial role in shaping productivity, structure, and successional dynamics of forest ecosystems [1]

  • We explore the conceptual basis for developing a proactive population control strategy for spruce budworm, the so-called Early Intervention Strategy (EIS)

  • Our EIS framework illustrates the fundamental components of managing spruce budworm through a proactive population control strategy (Figure 1)

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Summary

A Conceptual Framework for the Spruce Budworm

Quiring , Jacques Régnière 9 , Brigitte Richard and Michael Stastny 1

Introduction
Population Dynamics
A conceptual framework for Spruce budworm budworm Early Intervention
Oscillatory Dynamics
Double-Equilibrium Dynamics and EIS
Monitoring and Prioritizing Treatment Areas
Detecting Hotspots
Assessing Forest Susceptibility
Population
Hypothetical different
Enhance Additive Mortality
Limit Compensation
Economic
Ecological
Sociopolitical
Communication and Outreach
Communications Strategy
Key Messages
Outreach Tactics
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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