New York Daily News

Meet the tree-killer beetles!

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ALBANY — A beetle that has killed millions of acres of pines in southern forests is munching its way north, and new research suggests its tree-killing prowess could be magnified in cooler climes.

Once unheard-of north of Delaware, southern pine beetles have been steadily expanding their range as the climate warms. Efforts are underway to quell a large outbreak in Long Island’s pine barrens and monitoring traps have caught beetles as far north as New England. The rice-sized black insect could reach Nova Scotia by 2020 and cover forests from the upper Midwest to Maine by 2080, according to a Columbia University study published in the journal Nature Climate Change in August.

Now there’s more bad news in a new study from Dartmouth College: Cooler fall and winter temperatur­es in this new range increase the beetle’s destructiv­e potential. That’s because larvae developing in the fall are put on hold as pupae when the temperatur­e drops below 50 degrees Fahrenheit, to emerge as adults for a mass killing spree in springtime.

The researcher­s found that in warmer regions, beetles mature at various times rather than all at once.

“The way they kill trees is by attacking in large numbers, like a pack of wolves killing a moose,” said Matthew Ayres, co-author of the study published last month in the journal Oecologia.

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