Spruce beetle outbreaks have been reported in the Rocky Mountains of western North America since the late 1800s. In their classic paper, Spruce Beetle in the Rockies, Schmid and Frye reviewed the literature that emerged from the extensive outbreaks in Colorado in the 1940s. A new wave of outbreaks has affected Rocky Mountain subalpine spruce-fir forests beginning in the mid-1980s and continuing to the present. These outbreaks have spurred another surge of basic and applied research in the biology, ecology and management of spruce and spruce beetle populations. This paper is a review of literature on spruce beetle focusing on work published since the late 1970s and is intended as an addendum to Spruce Beetle in the Rockies
Age-structure stand analyses and dendrochronological techniques were used to investigate effects of ...
Understanding disturbance interactions and their ecological consequences remains a major challenge f...
While bark beetle disturbance is an inherent component of coniferous forest ecosystems throughout th...
Spruce beetle outbreaks have been reported in the Rocky Mountains of western North America since the...
This report summarizes the literature on the spruce beetle in the western United States, primarily i...
The Engelmann spruce beetle (Dendroctonus engelmanni Hopk.) is the most serious pest of the Engelman...
The spruce beetle is a native species in Colorado’s spruce forest ecosystem. Endemic populations are...
Over the past two decades, unprecedented spruce beetle outbreaks have been observed throughout cordi...
Spruce beetle outbreaks are the primary biotic disturbance affecting forests in the Intermountain sp...
Bark beetles act as “agents of change” within the conifer forests of the Rocky Mountain area. They p...
Recent research provides a new perspective on the causes of mountain pine beetle outbreaks in lodgep...
We analyzed 17 photographs, taken between 1873 and 1915, that illustrate widespread mortality in sub...
The spruce beetle, Dendroctonus rufipennis (Kirby), is the most significant natural mortality agent ...
We analyzed 17 photographs, taken between 1873 and 1915, that illustrate widespread mortality in sub...
The montane forests (i.e. below about 2900 m altitude) of the Colorado Front Range have experienced ...
Age-structure stand analyses and dendrochronological techniques were used to investigate effects of ...
Understanding disturbance interactions and their ecological consequences remains a major challenge f...
While bark beetle disturbance is an inherent component of coniferous forest ecosystems throughout th...
Spruce beetle outbreaks have been reported in the Rocky Mountains of western North America since the...
This report summarizes the literature on the spruce beetle in the western United States, primarily i...
The Engelmann spruce beetle (Dendroctonus engelmanni Hopk.) is the most serious pest of the Engelman...
The spruce beetle is a native species in Colorado’s spruce forest ecosystem. Endemic populations are...
Over the past two decades, unprecedented spruce beetle outbreaks have been observed throughout cordi...
Spruce beetle outbreaks are the primary biotic disturbance affecting forests in the Intermountain sp...
Bark beetles act as “agents of change” within the conifer forests of the Rocky Mountain area. They p...
Recent research provides a new perspective on the causes of mountain pine beetle outbreaks in lodgep...
We analyzed 17 photographs, taken between 1873 and 1915, that illustrate widespread mortality in sub...
The spruce beetle, Dendroctonus rufipennis (Kirby), is the most significant natural mortality agent ...
We analyzed 17 photographs, taken between 1873 and 1915, that illustrate widespread mortality in sub...
The montane forests (i.e. below about 2900 m altitude) of the Colorado Front Range have experienced ...
Age-structure stand analyses and dendrochronological techniques were used to investigate effects of ...
Understanding disturbance interactions and their ecological consequences remains a major challenge f...
While bark beetle disturbance is an inherent component of coniferous forest ecosystems throughout th...