no. 5.558
Ips Beetles
by W. Cranshaw and D.A. Leatherman* (6/13)
Quick Facts...
- Ips is a common group of bark beetles that infests pine and spruce trees.
- Ips beetles rarely attack healthy trees. Most problems with ips occur to
newly transplanted pines or when plants are under stress.
- Several generations of ips can occur in a season.
- There are 11 species of ips beetles found in Colorado.
Ips beetles, sometimes known as “engraver beetles,” are bark beetles that
damage pine and spruce trees. They develop under the bark and produce girdling
tunnels that can cause dieback and kill trees. Eleven species of ips beetles
occur in Colorado (see Table 1 below).
Table 1. Common ips beetles (Ips species) affecting pines and
spruce in Colorado.
Species
Hosts
Comments
Ips hunteri
Spruce
This is a common species affecting Colorado blue spruce in landscape
settings. Upper portions of the tree are typically infested first.
Ips pilifrons
Spruce
A forest species often called the “spruce ips”; tends to infest the upper
part of fallen trunks.
Ips pini
Ponderosa, lodgepole
The most common species associated with other pines pines in
Colorado.
Ips knausi
Ponderosa pine
Common at base of trunk and in fresh stumps.
Ips calligraphus
Ponderosa pine
Largest ips species in Colorado; often in main trunk.
Ips confusus
Piñon, rarely other pines
Periodically kills piñons over large areas.
Ips latidens
3- and 5-needled pines
Ips borealis
Engelmann spruce
Ips integer
primarily Ponderosa pine
Ips woodi
Limber pine
Ips mexicanus
Lodgepole and limber
pines
Ips beetles are generally not considered as destructive or aggressive as bark
beetles in the genus Dendroctonus (mountain pine beetle, spruce beetle,
Douglas-fir beetle). Normally ips beetles limit their attacks to trees that are
in decline due to root injuries, wounding, or other stresses. However, under
widespread conditions which allow improved survival and large population
build-ups, ips beetles are a considerable threat to living trees. Two factors
that recently contributed to ips beetle problems in Colorado include: prolonged
drought stress; and the creation of freshly-cut wood (which is a prefered
breeding site) from forest homeowner efforts to reduce wildfire hazards.
Figure 1: Adult Dendroctonus (left) versus Ips (right).
Note gradually curved wing of Dendroctonus. Actual size of
Dendroctonus from 1/8 to 1/3 inch, Ips 1/8 to 3/8 inch.
Ips beetles are small (1/8 to 3/8 inch long), reddish-brown to black beetles.
They have a pronounced cavity at the rear end, which is lined with three to six
pairs of tooth-like spines, depending on the species. The latter feature
distinguishes them from other bark beetles (see Figure 1).
Symptoms of Ips Beetle Injury
Top dieback of spruce from drought stress and ips attack.
Storing cut firewood near susceptible trees greatly increases the risk of
ips beetle attack.
As adult ips beetles enter trees and tunnel, a yellowish- or reddish-brown
boring dust is produced and accumulates in bark crevices or around the base of
the tree. When the larval tunnel, affected parts of the tree discolor (“fade”)
and die. These symptoms may be limited to parts of the tree, such as a single
branch or the top. However unlike mountain pine beetle, infestation by ips
beetles does not necessarily mean the whole tree will die, but over time,
attacks may progress as later generations “fill” the tree and then ultimately
the host can die.
Small round holes in the bark of infested trees indicate the beetles have
completed development in that part of the tree and the adults have exited. The
presence of these holes peppering the bark show the beetles have moved to
another part of the same tree or to neighboring trees.
Woodpeckers are common predators of ips beetles. Their presence may also
indicate bark beetle activity. Woodpeckers often remove the tree bark in an
effort to obtain this food source. This habit results in ragged holes or patches
of missing bark on the tree.
Generalized Life History
Adults overwinter under the bark or in surrounding litter at the tree base.
They begin to attack weakened trees in the spring. Initially the male enters the
tree, constructs a cavity under the bark known as the “nuptial chamber.” Females
are attracted to the tree by chemicals (pheromones) produced by the male.
After mating, females (usually three) excavate egg galleries off the central
chamber. The tunnels produced by the adults appear as a “Y”- or “H”- shaped
pattern. These galleries are mostly free of boring dust, which is pushed out of
the entrance hole as the adult beetles work. These “cleared out” galleries have
a different appearance than the debris-filled galleries of Dendroctonus. Eggs
are laid along the gallery and young larvae soon hatch and begin tunneling
smaller lateral galleries that lightly etch the sapwood. They are small grubs,
about 1/4 inch long when mature, white to dirty gray, legless, with dark heads.
In Colorado, two to four generations of these beetles usually develop per
year.
Boring dust at the base of a pine tree. Reddish boring dust is caused by ips
beetles. The whitish dust is from ambrosia bark beetles.
Tunneling by Ips hunteri in blue
spruce.
Management
To prevent ips beetle attacks, use practices that promote vigorous tree
growth. Properly siting trees in landscape plantings is important to allow
optimal growing conditions as the tree matures. Adequate – but not excessive –
water may be needed. Root injuries caused by mechanical damage, compaction, or
disease should be avoided.
Freshly-cut material that results from pruning or thinning practices (called
“slash”) should be removed from the vicinity of valuable trees. Never stack
green or infested coniferous wood next to living coniferous trees. Such green
woody material should be chipped or treated so that the inner bark area is
destroyed. Ips larvae will not survive standard chipping or debarking
treatments. Other treatments could include scattering (as opposed to piling)
slash to promote rapid drying.
Trees at risk of ips attack include newly transplanted trees, trees suffering
root injuries from construction, and trees surrounded by large breeding
populations of ips beetles. These types of trees can benefit from preventive
insecticide applications.
Insecticides are used as drenching preventive sprays on the trunks and larger
branches. These insecticides need to be applied prior to adult beetle
infestation. (Remember that overwintering beetles begin emerging in spring as
soon as daytime temperatures consistently reach 50 F to 60 F.) However, timing
can be difficult to determine since ips beetles can have multiple, overlapping
generations and life cycles. Adults have been observed entering trees during
warm days as early as late-February on through November. Because of this
extended activity, two treatments (early spring and summer) may be needed to
protect trees during high-risk conditions.
Insecticides used to prevent ips include either permethrin, bifenthrin, or
carbaryl (Sevin) as the active ingredient. There are many products currently on
the market containing these active ingredients. Follow the manufacturer’s
recommendation for the proper rate for bark beetle treatment. Bark beetle
applications at the labeled rate should provide at least three months control of
ips beetles.
When a preventively-sprayed tree later dies of beetle attack, it is usually
for one of the following reasons: 1) the tree was sprayed after it was attacked;
2) the spray was applied at too dilute a rate; 3) the entire bark surface of the
susceptible part of the tree was not sprayed; or 4) the material wore off and
was no longer effective.
Note: Concentrations of insecticides used to control bark
beetles are often considerably greater than those used for insects on foliage.
To avoid needle burning, try to limit the application to the bark, particularly
when using liquid (emulsifiable concentrate) formulations that have increased
risk of causing plant injuries.
Insecticide applications are not needed when ips beetles do not pose a
serious risk to healthy trees. Ips problems are often an issue for a few years,
then lessen naturally to non-threatening levels. This is the normal condition in
Colorado. A rule of thumb when deciding if preventive treatments are needed is
to survey for infested groups of bark beetle-killed trees (as determined by dead
foliage) within sight of the live trees in question. Also, transplants or
recently disturbed trees in natural forest areas or near other known sources of
ips may warrant protection. Tree value, of course, is always a consideration.
There is often more interest in protecting high-value trees such as those around
residences, golf courses, or in other highly visible settings.
No chemical treatment exists for trees or wood already infested by ips
beetles. In rare cases where it is feasible to reduce the threat to live trees
by killing beetles within infested trees before they exit, treatments involve
bark removal, chipping the wood into small pieces, covering piles with a
double-layer of 6-mil thick clear plastic sealed around the edges with soil to
heat (solarize) the wood, or physical removal of infested material from the site
to an area a mile or more from susceptible trees.
Ips confusus pitch tubes on infested pinyon pine trunk.
Ips pini egg galleries under bark of ponderosa pine trunk..
* W. Cranshaw, Colorado State University Extension
entomologist and professor, bioagricultural sciences and pest management; and
D.A. Leatherman, Colorado State Forest Service entomologist (Retired). This fact
sheet was produced in cooperation with the Colorado State Forest Service. 12/02.
Revised 6/13.
Colorado State University, U.S. Department of Agriculture, and
Colorado counties cooperating. Extension programs are available to all without
discrimination. No endorsement of products mentioned is intended nor is
criticism implied of products not mentioned.
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