Abstract

Understanding the occurrence patterns of forest pests is fundamental for effective forest management from both economic and ecological perspectives. Here, we review the history of the occurrence patterns and causes of outbreaks and declines of pests in Korean pine forests over the last 50 years. During this period, the major pests of pine forests in Korea have shifted from pine caterpillar (Dendrolimus spectabilis Butler) to the pine needle gall midge (PNGM, Thecodiplosis japonensis (Uchida and Inouye)) and finally to pine wilt disease (PWD) caused by the pine wood nematode (Bursaphelenchus xylophilus (Steiner and Buhrer) Nickle). Outbreaks of pine caterpillar, a native species in Korea, have been recorded as far back as 900 years, and it was the most relevant forest pest in Korea until the 1970s. The decline of its importance has been attributed to reforestation and higher levels of subsequent natural enemy activity. The PNGM is an invasive species, first discovered in Korea in 1929, that became widely distributed by 1992 and the major forest pest in the 1980s and 1990s. A suite of parasitic wasps attacking the PNGM contributed at least partially to the decline of PNGM densities. Following the decline of the PNGM, damage from PWD has increased since 2003. These shifts in major forest pests might be related to changes in forest composition and interactions among forest pests. Therefore, a new management strategy for controlling forest pests is required to mitigate the decline of pine forests in Korea.

Highlights

  • Understanding forest pest outbreaks is fundamental for the effective economic and ecological management of forest ecosystems

  • Intrinsic factors are related to the rate of population increase and cyclical population dynamics [1], while extrinsic factors include biological factors such as the interactions between species and the effects of abiotic factors such as temperature and precipitation [2]

  • Biological interactions include the bottom-up effects of forest composition and tree age and the top-down regulation exerted by natural enemies [2,3,4]

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding forest pest outbreaks is fundamental for the effective economic and ecological management of forest ecosystems. Lepidoptera (Dendrolimus pini L., Hyloicus pinastri L. and Bupalus piniarius L.) in a pine plantation in Germany between 1880 and 1940 Using these data, Turchin and Taylor [9] showed the periodical occurrence of these species. In Korea, the monitoring of forest pests has been conducted for both major and occasional pests such as Thecodiplosis japonensis (Uchida and Inouye) (pine needle gall midge (PNGM)) and Hyphantria cunea (Drury) (fall webworm) populations since 1968 [12], including the measurement of annual changes of densities, dispersal, and distributions [13]. Few studies have examined the long-term changes in forest pest populations in relation to the conditions of the forest ecosystem. Management strategies based on natural enemies and chemical controls are discussed and new directions for forest pest management are proposed

Forest Change and Monitoring Records in Korea
Monitoring of Korean Forest Pests
Changes in Major
Changes in Major Pests in Pine Forests
Occurrence History and Ecology
Environmental Factors and Management
Causes of Changes in Dominance of Insect Pests in Korean Forests
Findings
Perspectives
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