Don’t blame the bark beetles
ELISABETH M. BROWN
On a recent trip to New Mexico, we stayed in a house overlooking a
canyon filled with Pinyon pines. Pinyons don’t have the
Christmas-tree shape of other pines, but have a branching pattern
more typical of trees with leaves. They produce edible pinyon nuts,
otherwise known as pine nuts, in their exceeding sticky pine cones.
Pinyon pines are often found with Juniper bushes, in a community
known as Pinyon-Juniper woodland. It grows in areas so dry that no
other pine can survive. In New Mexico, we passed miles of it between
Santa Fe and Los Alamos, but something was terribly wrong. The
junipers were their usual dark green, but the pinyons were brown.
A friend confirmed that the pinyons were succumbing to a bark
beetle infestation brought on by a four year drought. Bark beetles
and other tree-eating insects are always around, part of the natural
system that prunes out weak and unfit trees. The beetles attack by
boring in through the bark; the tree’s defense is to drown them in
sap. A forester told me that if the sap runs clear from a beetle
entry point, the tree has won; if it’s cloudy, the beetle is in.
During a prolonged drought, the trees can’t produce enough sap to
repel the beetles. In that New Mexico canyon, pinyon trees on the
south-facing (drier) slope were dead. Trees on the wetter,
north-facing slope were still green.
This is tree mortality on a landscape scale: perhaps irreversible
habitat conversion looms. On the south-facing slopes more
drought-tolerant desert shrubs will eventually grow; on the
north-facing slopes, the pinyons may hang on for some time. But a
letter from friends in northern Arizona notes that junipers and even
some prickly pear cactus are dying there.
In the Southwest, this has all happened before. Around AD 1300, an
extended drought forced the Anasazi Indians (the ‘old ones’) to
abandon their cliff dwellings in New Mexico and Arizona when their
crops failed. The people and their culture vanished into the heat
haze.
The same equation holds everywhere: stressed trees plus bark
beetles equals dead and dying pines. About a decade ago, overcrowded
Lodgepole pine forests in Yosemite National Park were hit by a
widespread bark beetle infestation; this was followed a few years
afterward by massive back country fires. Now the forest is regrowing.
In southern California mountains, the drought is having the same
effect on the big Ponderosa pines near Idyllwild and Julian. After
four years of scarce rainfall, huge swaths of mountainside are
covered with dead and dying pines.
The many standing dead trees are a constant fire and safety hazard
within the mountain villages.
On the local coastline we have only one native pine: the few
endangered Torrey Pines in coastal San Diego. Like other coastal
plants, much of their water comes from ocean fogs. Perhaps these
foggy refuges protect the trees from California’s recurring droughts.
I don’t blame the bark beetles for the demise of the pinyons;
they’re just part of what a ranger described as, “the way of the
forest.”
* ELISABETH BROWN is a biologist and the president of Laguna
Greenbelt Inc.
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