Abstract

Bark beetles (Coleoptera: Curculionidae, Scolytinae) feed and breed in dead or severely weakened host trees. When their population densities are high, some species aggregate on healthy host trees so that their defences may be exhausted and the inner bark successfully colonized, killing the tree in the process. Here we investigate under what conditions participating with unrelated conspecifics in risky mass attacks on living trees is an adaptive strategy, and what this can tell us about bark beetle outbreak dynamics. We find that the outcome of individual host selection may deviate from the ideal free distribution in a way that facilitates the emergence of tree-killing (aggressive) behavior, and that any heritability on traits governing aggressiveness seems likely to exist in a state of flux or cycles consistent with variability observed in natural populations. This may have implications for how economically and ecologically important species respond to environmental changes in climate and landscape (forest) structure. The population dynamics emerging from individual behavior are complex, capable of switching between “endemic” and “epidemic” regimes spontaneously or following changes in host availability or resistance. Model predictions are compared to empirical observations, and we identify some factors determining the occurrence and self-limitation of epidemics.

Highlights

  • Bark beetles have coexisted with their tree hosts since the early Mesozoic [1], and while often regarded as pests, bark beetles and their associated fungi play important roles in nutrient cycling, forest dynamics and biodiversity [2,3,4,5]

  • The Sequential Restricted Distribution (SRD) predict that only dead trees will initially be colonized (Fig. 2a), but as the local population density increases, these grow increasingly crowded until density dependence outweighs the risks of either settling in a living tree or emigrating (Fig. 2a–d)

  • The observed dynamics emerge from a single, flexible strategy shared by the whole population [28], but individuals maximizing their fitness does not necessarily imply maximized population growth: the distributions between dead and living trees mostly result in population growth rates far from maximum (Fig. 2c)

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Summary

Introduction

Bark beetles have coexisted with their tree hosts since the early Mesozoic [1], and while often regarded as pests, bark beetles and their associated fungi play important roles in nutrient cycling, forest dynamics and biodiversity [2,3,4,5]. The SRD predict that only dead trees will initially be colonized (Fig. 2a), but as the local population density increases, these grow increasingly crowded until density dependence outweighs the risks of either settling in a living tree or emigrating (Fig. 2a–d).

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