Healthy and Contortylenchus reversus infected Douglas Fir beetles were colonized in logs in the laboratory. At 7, 14, and 23 days after introduction of the beetles into the logs, the bark was removed from some of the logs and the length and shape of the primary gallery, the number of eggs laid, and the egg viability were determined for each pair of parent beetles. Parasitism caused a 25, 28, and 27% reduction in the length of the primary egg gallery built by the infected female at 7, 14, and 23 days, respectively, after the start of colonization. In addition, the number of eggs laid by the infected females by 7, 14, and 23 days after the start of colonization were 50, 33, and 45%, respectively, lower than that of healthy female beetles. Despite the differences in gallery length between control and infected females, linear regression analysis showed that the rates of gallery construction were not significantly different. However, infected female beetles showed significantly lower rates of egg-laying than did healthy female beetles. Nematode parasitism did not affect gallery shape and egg viability of female Douglas Fir beetles. Mating of healthy female beetles with infected males affected neither the gallery length nor the fecundity of the uninfected females.