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bark beetle
(redirected from bark beetles)

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bark beetle

Any one of a number of species of mainly wood-boring beetles. Bark beetles are cylindrical, brown or black, and 1–9 mm/0.04–0.4 in long. Some live just under the bark and others bore deeper into the hardwood. The detailed tunnelling pattern that they make within the trunk varies with the species concerned, and is used for identification.

Most bark beetles live in forest trees; some, however, attack fruit trees. Generally, but not always, dead or dying timber is attacked. Some species transmit pathogens, for example, the fungus that causes Dutch elm disease.

Examples include the birch bark beetle Scolytus ratzeburgi and the greater fruit-tree bark beetle S. meli.

Classification

Bark beetles are in the families Curculionidae or Scolytidae, order Coleoptera, class Insecta, phylum Arthropoda.

The social habits of members of this family are diverse. Various degrees of polygamy and monogamy are practised; simple unorganized and intensive polygamy; organized polygamy, and a gradual reduction in the number of adult females per male. For example in the genus Xyleborus a single male may be associated with 60 or more females; in Ips one male is associated with two females. The genus Scolytus is monogamous.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
In the Angeles National Forest, trees grow more vulnerable to wildfires as bark beetles that thrive in hot weather proliferate, while water supplies remain fragile.
At sites across four states, a team headed by David Breshears of the University of Arizona in Tucson found that 40 to 80 percent of the pine nut-producing trees died during the drought and its plague of bark beetles.
Wildfires that swept California in 2003 also wreaked havoc on the San Bernardino Mountains, where approximately 12 million trees weakened by six years of drought are now dead or dying from the resulting stress and an epidemic of bark beetles.
 
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