Impacts of Exotic Pests on Forest Ecosystems: An Update
Abstract
:1. Background
- (1)
- Examining the direct and indirect biotic vs. abiotic effects of pests on forest ecosystems, followed by an assessment of short- and long-term impacts and feedback;
- (2)
- Assessing and discussing how climate change and major disturbances may facilitate such effects;
- (3)
- Proposing future research perspectives with a list of urgent questions and tasks for current and future studies;
- (4)
- Recommending corresponding management strategies following new research findings.
2. Biotic Effects
2.1. Direct Effects
2.2. Indirect Effects
3. Abiotic Effects
3.1. Direct Effects
3.2. Indirect Effects
4. Feedback Effects
5. Short- vs. Long-Term Effects
6. Climate Change May Enhance the Impacts of Pests on Forest Ecosystems
7. Perspectives on Future Ecosystem-Level Research
- (1)
- More rigorous studies are needed to examine exotic pests’ direct and indirect impacts on native insect species, especially those that provide key ecosystem functions necessary to maintain healthy ecosystems;
- (2)
- Large-scale studies are needed to examine regional, latitudinal, and elevational variations of ecosystem consequences due to exotic pest infestation;
- (3)
- Wherever possible, long-term studies that are newly initiated or are based on ongoing research (especially short-term projects) are needed to continue to detect chronic changes at the ecosystem level. Because invasion impacts can be highly context-dependent, the most helpful studies would include repeated observations and experiments at multiple sites that differ in the abundance of invertebrate invasive species [27];
- (4)
- More research to delineate exotic pests’ native ranges is critical for developing more effective biocontrol and management policies and practices [65];
- (5)
- (6)
- Future research should assess the feedback effects of altered soil and microbial communities due to exotic pest invasion on further pest and plant invasions;
- (7)
- We need to study whether affected ecosystems can recover to pre-invasion status, and if so, how fast, assuming the target pest can be successfully eradicated. Similarly, if the target pest cannot be eradicated, we need to better understand how cycles of pest infestation are related to regeneration of the host species;
- (8)
- Better and constantly improved models and tools are needed to predict the spread of invasive forest insects and diseases [70];
- (9)
- We need a better understanding of how exotic pest infestations directly and indirectly affect the services provided by forest ecosystems.
8. Urgent Tasks for Ecosystem-Level Management
- (1)
- In some regions and for some habitats, complete baseline information on exotic pests (e.g., the number of species, species identities, abundance, and distribution) is still lacking. Contributing to this is the difficulty of systematically monitoring the presence of exotic pests when their detection typically requires field surveys across broad scales, over which the pests may be spreading at a relatively high rate. Such information/knowledge gaps could be filled by enhanced efforts and investments in field surveys, inventories, and timely assessments at all levels (i.e., local, regional, national, and international), in addition to the wider incorporation of citizen science participation;
- (2)
- Many of the impacts from exotic pests are due to the fact that many such pests escape their natural enemies in their native habitats and many hosts in invaded regions never developed resistance and adaptations (if they ever can) [71]. Therefore, more efforts are needed to identify natural enemies that can be used in biological control;
- (3)
- For many exotic pests, basic research is urgently needed to investigate the species’ invasiveness, life history, genetics, dispersal mechanisms, and mutualism mechanisms [72];
- (4)
- The impact of invasive species research can be extended through large-scale citizen science activities and public education on exotic pests, including those targeted at inventorying species and monitoring their effects, among other efforts [73];
- (5)
- The introduction and spread of exotic pests can be interrupted by improving and implementing rules and regulations and strengthening quarantine law enforcement;
- (6)
- Closer collaborations in data and information sharing around the world should be performed [74].
- (1)
- Whether and/or to what level may an infested forest ecosystem recover if the exotic pest can be eradicated? Are there any concrete successful exam-ples?
- (2)
- What exotic pests may be enhanced or hindered by projected climate change, and how?
- (3)
- How do we better deal with multiple stresses including pest infestation, fire, and drought, at the same time?
- (4)
- How can advances in new technologies such as remote sensing, genetics, ar-tificial intelligence (AI), and machine learning assist in prevention and pest management?
9. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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---|---|---|---|---|
Avila et al. [22] | Phytophthora cinnamomi | Quercus suber | Altered biogeochemical cycles, soil respiration, and nutrient availability. | Field |
Anderson-Teixeira et al. [2] | All pests on 66 plots | Oaks forests, Hemlock forests, ash forests | Reduced biomass and carbon storage. | Field |
Bergemann et al. [23] | Phytophthora ramorum | Notholithocarpus densiflorus forest | Reduction in the hyphal abundance of ectomycorrhizal fungi from soil thus affecting decomposition, nutrient acquisition, and ecosystem succession. | Field |
Bjelke et al. [24] | Phytophthora alni | Alder trees (Alnus spp.) | Reduced soil nitrogen, shade, and river/stream bank stability, changes in food webs of both terrestrial and aquatic. | Field |
Block et al. [25] | Hemlock woolly adelgid | Hemlock forests | Decrease N retention. | Field |
Brantley et al. [26] | Hemlock woolly adelgid | Hemlock forests | Reduced annual forest transpiration (Et); species replaced by deciduous species may increase forest Et but reduce stream discharge. | Field |
Cameron et al. [27] | Terrestrial invertebrate invaders | Terrestrial ecosystems (general) | Single invaders increased soil nitrogen pools, while multiple species did not. | Review |
Crowley et al. [13] | Beech bark disease, hemlock woolly adelgid (Adelges tsugae), sudden oak death | Tree species replacement | NPP lower, net C loss (first 100 years), total N lower. | Simulation |
De la Fuente and Beck [28] | Pine wood nematode | Coniferous forests | Disrupt the coherence and functionality of protected area networks. | Field |
Edburg et al. [29] | Bark beetle | Lodgepole pine forests | Reduced plant C-uptake and GPP, increased decomposition and nutrient loss; effects are time (stage)-dependent. | Conceptual |
Ellison et al. [30] | Hemlock woolly adelgid | Hemlock (T. canadensis) forests | Reset successional sequences, homogenized biological diversity at landscape scales, altered hydrological dynamics, and changed forest stands from carbon sinks into carbon sources. | Review |
Hogg and Daane [31] | Cheiracanthium mildei L. (spider) | Oak woodland Vineyards | Cascading negative cross-trophic effects that ultimately reduce ecosystem service. | Field |
Ignace et al. [32] | Hemlock woolly adelgid, elongate hemlock scale (Fiorinia externa) | Hemlock (T. canadenis) forests | Dramatic increases in soil respiration; decrease in soil organic layer mass and in the C:N of the remaining organic material; and decline in soil organic layer C storage. | Field |
l-M-Arnold et al. [33] | Winter moth and mottled umber | Deciduous oak forests | Increased soil C and N levels but reduced C:N ratio. | Field |
Jenkins et al. [20] | Hemlock woolly adelgid | Eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) forests | Light availability to the understory and seedling regeneration both increased. Net N mineralization, nitrification, and N turnover increased. Inorganic N availability and nitrification rates increased dramatically, leading to nitrate leaching. | Field |
Knoepp et al. [34] | Hemlock woolly adelgid | Hemlock (T. canadensis) forests | During the 4-year study, litterfall composition changed, hemlock plots had cooler spring soil temperatures, greater surface soil and forest floor total C than hardwood plots. | Field |
Kristensen et al. [15] | Geometrid moth | Birch forests | Lower foliar C, higher soil C-accumulation, reduced C:N of mineralization. | Microcosm experiment |
Letheren et al. [35] | Hemlock woolly adelgid | Hemlock (T. canadensis) forests | Negative impacts on the diversity and stability of ecosystems. | Review |
Lovett et al. [36] | Spongy moth (Lymantria dispar), hemlock woolly adelgid, beech bark disease, Asian long-horned beetle | Oak forests, beech forests, hemlock forests, sugar maple forests, white ash forests | Reduction in productivity, disruption of nutrient cycles, and reduction in seed production. | Field |
Milligan et al. [37] | Soil-nesting invasive ant (Pheidole megacephala) | Acacia drepanolobium saplings | Reduced carbon fixation and storage. | Field |
Nisbet et al. [38] | Emerald ash borer | Ash trees (riparian forests) | Reductions in high-quality leaf litter, large canopy openings. | Review and synthesis |
Seidl et al. [39] | Five detrimental alien pests | Forests in Europe | Projected to significantly reduce the long-term C storage potential of European forests. | Simulation/modeling |
Wilson et al. [19] | Hemlock woolly adelgid, hemlock scale (Fiorinia externa) | Hemlock (T. canadensis) forests | Lower above/belowground biomass ratios, more needle loss, impacted the concentrations of primary metabolites, increased free amino acids local, reduction in starch, and manipulation of nitrogen pools. | Field |
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Guo, Q.; Potter, K.M.; Ren, H.; Zhang, P. Impacts of Exotic Pests on Forest Ecosystems: An Update. Forests 2023, 14, 605. https://doi.org/10.3390/f14030605
Guo Q, Potter KM, Ren H, Zhang P. Impacts of Exotic Pests on Forest Ecosystems: An Update. Forests. 2023; 14(3):605. https://doi.org/10.3390/f14030605
Chicago/Turabian StyleGuo, Qinfeng, Kevin M. Potter, Hai Ren, and Peixia Zhang. 2023. "Impacts of Exotic Pests on Forest Ecosystems: An Update" Forests 14, no. 3: 605. https://doi.org/10.3390/f14030605
APA StyleGuo, Q., Potter, K. M., Ren, H., & Zhang, P. (2023). Impacts of Exotic Pests on Forest Ecosystems: An Update. Forests, 14(3), 605. https://doi.org/10.3390/f14030605