JRoland
ArboristSite Operative
So, here in Northern California, a large quantity of pines are dying. It used to be, get a call to go look at a job and there would be one or two dead pines. Maybe they dug a new septic, maybe it was a previously weakened tree, you get the idea. Now, I get calls where every pine tree in the yard is dead. I was reading in a local newspaper, 100 million pines are dead / dying in the Sierra Nevadas. My question is this: so if the conditions have been ideal for a number of years for maximum bark beetle reproduction, what will stop the beetles? From what I understand, even the approaching El Niño ( hopefully) will not do much, as it will just give some trees resources to better fight off the attacks. Will the amounts of beetles here now and the conditions being what they are, will this just continue until they run out of food and we have stands of pure incense-cedars or California black oaks? Or is there a balancing mechanism that will come into play soon? Catastrophic wildfire? We have already been having these. Just looking to kick this around a little bit with folks.