Monday, September 21, 2015

Insect Management in Commercial Forestry



Presented by
Pabasara Gunawardane

All parts of a tree are vulnerable to attack by pests. Pest damage can range from slight damage that has no effect on the value of the harvested product, to severe damage that stunts or kills the trees or reduces their market value. Tree pests include insects and mites, diseases, weeds, vertebrates, and nematodes. 

Insects belong to the kingdom Animalia and in the phylum Arthropoda. Insects are categorised under the class Insecta. More than one million different species of insects have been identified. Some insects of orders such as Coleoptera, Lepidoptera, Hymenoptera, Hemiptera, Isoptera and Orthoptera are considered as pests in plantation forestry. Tectona grandis, Eucalyptus sp. Swietenia macrophylla, Santalum album and Aquilaria sp. are some of the major plantation species in Sri Lanka and the world

When consider about the insects, at least 174 species of insects have been recorded from the living teak tree. Most of these insects are not economically significant in their attacks. Teak defoliator (Hyblaea puera) causes severe defoliation and, hence, reduce growth rate of the tree. The larva of leaf skeletonizer (Eutectona machaeralis) feeds on the green leaf tissue between the network of veins, leaving the skeleton of veins intact. The most important stem borer in young teak plantations is Zeuzera coffeae. Another stem borer is Xyleutes ceramicus and it is found in older Teak plantations.
More than 920 species of insects are associated in Eucalypts. The most common pest problem of exotic eucalypts is mortality of saplings caused by root-feeding termites. Eucalyptus Gall Wasp has been reported in Sri Lanka in 2010 and it was successfully controlled by natural enemies of the pest insect.

Mahogany shoot borer (Hypsipyla robusta) outbreak is the most severe pest attack found in Mahogany. It is suggested that the relatively low level of attack in Sri Lanka may be due to good overhead shade where the trees have been planted.

Zeuzera coffease (red borer) Indarbela quardinotata (bark-feeding caterpillar) and Aristobia octofasiculata (heartwood borer) are some of the pests causing considerable damage to living Sandalwood trees. In agar plantation no such serious pests and diseases have been observed. A leaf-eating caterpillar (Heortia vitessoides) is considered to be the most destructive pest causing damage by complete defoliation of agar plantations. When compare with the other countries of the region the status of the pest outbreaks in forest plantations are lower in Sri Lanka.

In earlier attempts to control pest the commonly used method was to kill all the pests and with time plantation managers realized that pests need to be controlled only if they cause economic damages. The pest management concept is used to indicate management of the pest population to limit it to a tolerable level. With the advancement of knowledge and the science the concept of integrated pest management (IPM) has been introduced in order to manage the insects and pests in commercial plantations.

Lack of sufficient scientific research, inapplicability of sophisticated pest management methods used in developed countries and having the low attention on the pest management in forest plantation species by the government are major challenges in insect management in Sri Lankan forestry context.

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