Abstract

The pine looper Bupalus piniaria (L.) is one of the most common pests feeding on the Scots pine Pinus sylvestris L. Pine looper outbreaks show a feature of periodicity and have significant ecological and economic impacts. Climate and weather factors play an important role in pine looper outbreak occurrence. We tried to determine what weather conditions precede B. piniaria outbreaks in the southeast of the West Siberian Plain and what climate oscillations cause them. Due to the insufficient duration and incompleteness of documented observations on outbreaks, we used the history of pine looper outbreaks reconstructed using dendrochronological data. Using logistic regression, we found that the factor influencing an outbreak the most is the weather four years before it. A combination of warm spring, dry summer, and cool autumn triggers population growth. Summer weather two years before an outbreak is also critical: humidity higher than the average annual value in summer is favorable for the pine looper. The logistic regression model predicted six out of seven outbreaks that occurred during the period for which weather data are available. We discovered a link between outbreaks and climatic oscillations (mainly for the North Atlantic oscillation, Pacific/North America index, East Atlantic/Western Russia, West Pacific, and Scandinavian patterns). However, outbreak predictions based on the teleconnection patterns turned out to be unreliable. We believe that the complexity of the interaction between large-scale atmospheric processes makes the direct influence of individual oscillations on weather conditions relatively small. Furthermore, climate changes in recent decades modulated atmospheric processes changing the pattern predicting pine looper outbreaks: Autumn became warmer four years before an outbreak, and summer two years before became drier.

Highlights

  • One of the most substantial problems in forestry is large-scale outbreaks of defoliators, for example, repeated outbreaks of Dendrolimus sibiricus Tschetverikov in Siberia and the Russian Far East [1,2], Choristoneura fumiferana (Clemens) in North America [3,4], and Zeiraphera griseana (Hübner) in Western Europe [5]

  • Pine looper population growth in the t − 4 year is somehow influenced by the weather of the whole growing season: spring (April–May) and autumn (September–October) temperature, summer (June–August) precipitation and hydrothermal coefficient (HTC), summer, and autumn (September) aridity

  • The reason is [54] that the coefficient for PrecJJA (t − 2) turned out to be negative (Table 1), while it was positively correlated with pine looper outbreaks (Figure 2G)

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Summary

Introduction

One of the most substantial problems in forestry is large-scale outbreaks of defoliators, for example, repeated outbreaks of Dendrolimus sibiricus Tschetverikov in Siberia and the Russian Far East [1,2], Choristoneura fumiferana (Clemens) in North America [3,4], and Zeiraphera griseana (Hübner) in Western Europe [5]. The defoliation leads to both economic [6,7] and ecological [8] consequences. This challenge is even more meaningful considering that future climate changes can facilitate the onset of outbreaks of phyllophages [9] in both direct and indirect ways. Defoliation of pine stands by B. piniaria often results in high (up to 100%) tree mortality rates [10,12] and causes heavy economic losses [13]. Scots pine is a commercially valuable tree species and plays an important ecosystem role. In this regard, it is essential to study the factors influencing the pest population fluctuations

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