Summer 2006:
Peter Jackson, a meteorologist in
Prince George B.C., couldn't believe what he was seeing on his radar screen. It was like a rainstorm, but thicker, and it was
crossing east over the
Rocky Mountains. It looked a little like insect swarms, except
insects had never been seen at such high altitudes before.
Farmers on the eastern slope
of the
Rockies described huge clouds of insects. They could hear them pinging off their
steel roofs. The swarms were so dense they gummed up the windshield wipers on the farmers' vehicles.
This was this first attack of the
Mountain Pine Beetle east of the Rocky Mountains
... the
year when the unthinkable actually happened: carried along by the prevailing winds,
trillions of
Mountain Pine Beetles crossed the Rocky Mountains from BC into
Alberta. Now, the great
Northern Boreal Forest, one of the world's richest ecosystems and one of its greatest carbon sinks, was face to face with a grave threat - a plague of insects, each
the size of a grain of rice.
In
British Columbia, the damage done by this hungry little creature was already well
known
. In the interior of B.C. people called it 'The Lodgepole
Tsunami.' In a period of
less than 10 years, swarms of Mountain Pine Beetles ate their way through 18 million
hectares of
Lodgepole Pine forest, an area the size of
Nova Scotia and
New Brunswick
combined. The ecological and economic cost has been staggering.
But the Mountain Pine Beetle is NOT an invasive species. It has lived with and co-evolved with the Lodgepole Pine for millennia. Like natural forest fires, the pine beetle is a critical actor in the natural cycle of forest regeneration. Every 25 years or so, in a
period of warm winters and warm, dry summers, the beetle's population would spike. Then they would attack, taking out over-mature trees, thus thinning the canopy to make way for younger tree growth. These outbreaks would last a year or two, then the normal weather patterns would prevail and an early cold snap or a stretch of cold winter weather would bring the population back under control.
But, in this outbreak, the beetle population in BC grew massively for a decade, and
devastated the province's forests. So what was it that unleashed this terrible force of
nature? The culprit is climate change. In its natural range, there is no longer the cold
weather brake that has kept the
Beetle's population under control. Now that the population has exploded, there's no telling where it will stop.
For the first time, the eastward march across
Canada of this seemingly unstoppable beetle invasion is now perceived as inevitable, especially since the beetle has no natural enemies, nor has man found any way to kill it.
The pine dominant Northern Boreal Forest, stretching all the way to the
Atlantic, is now
under threat, with ominous ramifications for our travel and tourism, as well as our
forestry industries.
Without our pine forests, long a
symbol of the
Canadian landscape and identity, the result will be a Canada we no longer recognize.
The Beetles are Coming takes the viewer on a rich, up close and personal journey into the world of the Mountain Pine Beetle, and uncovers the science behind this ecological
disaster. The story of this remarkable little creature the size of a grain of rice that
will destroy the pine forests of
North America epitomizes the cause and effect of how
climate change can upset the balance of nature with unpredictable, unimaginable,
devastating results.
Forest officials scrambled to contain the damage.
Once the lodgepole pines turned red they burned with a ferocious intensity. That combined with hot summers, created the ideal conditions for raging out-of-control forest fires.
Industry began
logging the infected trees in attempt to clear the forest and capitalize on the economic
value of the timber. At considerable expense, forestry officials in B.C. and Alberta began
marking and burning infested trees to control the spread but found it impossible to keep
up.
Despite repeated attempts to stop the pine beetle, the only real effective way to control
its population and expansion is cold. Yet, winters continue to get warmer. According to research from
Oregon State University, the lodgepole pine could almost disappear from the
Pacific Northwest by 2080. The beetles unstoppable advance is now poised to attack the jack pine, a close relative to the lodgepole pine, found in the boreal forest, the massive northern eco-region that stretches from
Alaska to
Newfoundland.
More ominously, the Alberta Forest
Genetic Resources
Council believes that
Canada's boreal forest which has evolved for thousands of years, will be vastly different in the short time period of one century - or less.
pine beetle, jack pine, boreal forest, forestry, beetle, infestation, nature, natural
disaster, pine, bc forest, alberta forest, lodgepole pine, infected trees, pine beetle
damage, pine beetle population, canada, canadian insects, beatles,
- published: 07 Apr 2013
- views: 51086