Bark beetle-driven community and biogeochemical impacts in forest ecosystems: a review

Author:

Siegert Courtney1ORCID,Clay Natalie2ORCID,Pace Kimberlyn1,Vissa Sneha3ORCID,Hofstetter Richard W4ORCID,Leverón Oscar5,Riggins John J6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Forestry, Forest and Wildlife Research Center, Mississippi State University , 775 Stone Boulevard, Mississippi State, MS 39762 , USA

2. Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, University of Arkansas , Fayetteville, AR , USA

3. Department of Biological Sciences, College of Environment, Forestry, and Natural Sciences, Northern Arizona University , Flagstaff, AZ , USA

4. School of Forestry, College of Environment, Forestry and Natural Sciences, Northern Arizona University , Flagstaff , AZ , USA

5. National University of Forest Sciences , Siguatepeque , Honduras

6. Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Entomology, and Plant Pathology, Mississippi State University , Mississippi State, MS , USA

Abstract

Abstract Bark beetles are a principal source of tree mortality in conifer forests, with beetle distribution and beetle-associated tree mortality increasing in frequency and extent. While bark beetles are associated with large-scale outbreaks that affect landscape structure, function, and wood quality, they are also drivers of important ecological processes that modify forest ecosystems. Bark beetle activity may affect biogeochemistry and forest decomposition processes by mediating microbial and detrital communities and by facilitating the turnover of deadwood. The turnover of deadwood in bark beetle-attacked forests has important implications for forest biogeochemical cycling, as dead wood releases CO2 into the atmosphere and carbon, nitrogen, and other nutrients into surrounding soils. However, our understanding of how initial physical, chemical, and biotic changes to bark beetle-attacked trees affect the succession of detrital organisms and decomposition of beetle-generated deadwood remains poor. Furthermore, the relationship between woody decomposition and landscape-level changes in biogeochemical processes in forest ecosystems following bark beetle activity is not well unified. This review article bridges this divide and provides an interdisciplinary perspective on tree mortality, ecological succession, and woody decomposition mediated by bark beetles.

Funder

National Science Foundation

National Institution of Food and Agriculture, US Department of Agriculture

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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