Possible New Introduction – European Spruce Bark Beetle
United States Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern Area, NA–TP–18–93.
Adults of the European spruce bark beetle, Ips typographus (L.) (Coleoptera: Scolytidae), recently were collected in pheromone–baited traps at the Port of Erie, Pennsylvania. There is no evidence that this species is established in the United States, but the detection signifies a threat to North American forests. In its native range of Europe and Asia, the spruce bark beetle is one of the most serious pests of spruce. The beetle prefers Norway spruce but also attacks other spruce. It occasionally feeds of fir, pine, and larch.
Damage and Detection
The European spruce bark beetle carries several fungi pathogenic to conifers. The most serious of these is a blue stain fungus, Ophiostoma polonicum Siem., which is capable of killing healthy trees. This fungus eventually interferes with the upward flow of water in the tree, resulting in wilted foliage. Diseased wood is stained with blue streaks, which markedly reduces its commercial value.
Surveys for European spruce bark beetles should concentrate on recently fallen, weakened, or diseased spruce, especially Norway spruce. Red–brown dust in bark crevices, numerous round (exit) holes, or small pitch tubes extruded from the bark can be evidence of these or other bark beetles. Adults can be attracted to the pheromone Ipslure. Large populations of bark beetles can sometimes be detected from a distance by one or more areas of red–topped trees.
Recognizing the Beetle
The following features will aid in recognizing the European spruce bark beetle:
- Beetle is cylindrical, red–brown to brown and 4.2–5.5 mm long (Fig. 2).
- Concave posterior portion of abdomen (declivity) has four teeth on each side (Fig. 3, 4).
- Tooth 2 is nearly equidistant from teeth 1 and 3 (Fig. 3, 4, 5).
- Tooth 3 is knobbed (capitate) in both sexes (Fig. 5).
- Concavity at posterior of abdomen is dull, without large setae (Fig. 6).
Adults of the spruce bark beetle are similar to some of our native Ips species. In the Northeastern United States, the pine engraver beetle, Ips pini (Say), is a common scolytid that resembles the European spruce bark beetle. The pine engraver differs in that it is smaller (3.3–4.3 mm long); the posterior concavity of the abdomen is shiny (Fig. 6); tooth 2 is distinctly close to tooth 3 than to tooth 1 (Fig. 7); and only the male has a capitate tooth 3 (Fig. 7). On the female pine engraver, tooth 3 is conical and similar to teeth 2 and 4.