Climate, Host Abundance and Spread: Unravelling the Drivers of Forest Pest Distributions in North America

Author:

Gougherty Andrew V.1,Walters Ashley D.1,Prasad Anantha1ORCID,Peters Matthew P.1,Matthews Stephen N.12,DeMerchant Ian3

Affiliation:

1. Northern Research Station USDA Forest Service Delaware Ohio USA

2. School of Environment and Natural Resources The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

3. Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service Atlantic Forestry Centre Fredericton New Brunswick Canada

Abstract

ABSTRACTAimForest pathogens, insect pests and parasitic plants are among the most important disturbance agents in forested ecosystems. Understanding where pests occur and where they might occur in the future will be important for understanding their impacts on host trees, and planning for future pest outbreaks.LocationNorth America.TaxonInsect pests, pathogens and parasitic plants of forest trees.MethodsHere, we develop and implement a framework to predict the contemporary distributions of 26 pest species that accounts for climate, host abundance and, for non‐native species, their spread on the landscape.ResultsWe show that pest distributions can be predicted primarily by climatic variables. The abundance of individual host trees had only minor explanatory power, but the summed total of host abundance frequently had greater importance—suggesting forest composition and the relative frequency of hosts and non‐hosts place strong limits on pest distributions. Non‐native pests were strongly impacted by the distance from their original discovery location in North America, which tended to interact with climate variables—suggesting most non‐native pests are not yet at equilibrium with their potential climatic ranges in North America.Main ConclusionsThis work helps to clarify the generalised controls on pest distributions and provide a framework for predicting pest distributions in future climates.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference64 articles.

1. AdaptWest Project.2022.“Gridded Current and Projected Climate Data for North America at 1 km Resolution Generated Using the ClimateNA v7.3 Software.”AdaptWest Project.

2. Historical Accumulation of Nonindigenous Forest Pests in the Continental United States

3. The global spread of crop pests and pathogens

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