Eco-gardening is at its best in The Monday Garden
December 18, 2005, Issue 190
When we talk about preserving biodiversity by preserving our native plants, part of the reason is so that our native insects with specialized diets will have something to eat. This statement may puzzle the gardener who thinks that bites out of the roses are a bad thing. After all, who needs bugs? Yeah, some of the "bugs" pollinate the flowers so that we have fruits and vegetables, some till the soil, some make the honey, some spin the silk, and some break dead things down into their original components for re-use, but…well, who cares about the rest of them?

PICTURE: Left to their own devices, our wonderful native eastern white pines grow tall and straight. Sunset at the corner of Strawberry Hill and Hillandale, Stamford CT November 2005. view larger image
Our small creepy-crawlies actually come from several families. There are the eight-legged spiders and mites, the six-legged the insects, the zero-legged worms, the centipedes and millipedes with too many legs to count, the armor-plated pill-bugs (related to shrimp), and a whole host of microscopic guys. For our purposes, they are all "bugs", even if to a biologist "bug" means just one kind of "insect" and "spiders" aren't "insects"...
The white pine weevil (Pissodes strobe) seems as good a candidate as any to start The Monday Garden native bug-appreciation day movement. Chances are you'll be much more likely to see this critter's work than the critter, which may be a good thing seeing that the bug is an ugly as an orc. You can tell all weevils by their long, downward curving snouts, good for poking holes in plant tissue. The white pine weevils are small beetle-types with splotchy, hard shells and the characteristic long snouts. Their children are pasty white legless grubs. Yuk.
However, this little bug's whole job is to go around topping out our native eastern white pine trees. According to the Ohio State University Extension these little guys "prefer" eastern white pine and various spruces, but, it is said, that in a pinch they'll also attack about 20 other pines, including, on rare occasion, a Douglas-fir or two. In other parts of the country, due to a difference in diet, the white pine weevil is called "Sitka spruce weevil" and "Engelmann spruce weevil".

PICTURE: The fork in this white pine (weevil caused?) creates a prefect scaffolding for a Hoyt Street Alley squirrel nest. December 2004, Stamford CT.
What the white pine weevil does, as a larva and adult, is feed on the new soft leaders at the top of the tree. They seldom kill a tree but can significantly change its shape.
Left to their own devices, eastern white pines grow tall and straight. When they loose their top leader, due to while pine weevils, utility companies, severe weather or other cause, they usually develop the soft, wind-swept shapes with which the trees grace many a New England sky-line.
If you look around the Northeast, here and there, you'll see a white pine grown to adulthood tall and straight, but most have developed multiple leaders and wonderful individualized shapes. There's no way to say for sure that a particular pine got its shape from a weevil rather than other cause but the weevils do a lot of the work.

PICTURE: young white pine with a dead center leader (curved over) -- the leader died sometime this past summer. Stop & Shop Parking Lot, Stamford CT December 2005
Interesting, sources pretty much agree that the only white pines likely to be killed by weevils are the under 4-footers growing in full sun, particularly if a bit over-watered (that means in a tree farm, tree nursery or front yard, rather than in natural part-shade understory conditions).
Equally interesting, they say that if the weevil population is in balance, usually only one weevil per tree will lay her eggs in the holes she makes right under the white pine's top bud cluster. In this case, most of the grubby larva will get smothered by the white pine's thick, plentiful resin, provided for exactly this purpose, and the tree's leader is likely to survive even if gets a bit (artistically) bent.
If there are too many adult weevils, multiple females will compete for egg-laying space on the same tree. If simultaneously attacked by several weevil broods, the tree is sure to loss its terminal (top) leader and possibly also the next rung down, which will change is its shape and stunt its growth, making it ugly for a year or two while it sheds the dead top and makes new leaders. (If this happened to your tree, prune out the dead parts.)
The weevil population is kept in balance naturally through the white pine's own defenses, predators, weather conditions, and the like. The weevil population will increase in monocultures (one-kind-of-plant places) of its chosen food plant, especially if any of the trees are unhealthy. The weevil population will also increase when the predators have been killed off by chemicals, unusual weather conditions, destruction of habitat or some other ecological disturbance.
Tree nurseries, of course, hate white pine weevils, because the nurseries are trying to sell "prefect" little trees, grown quickly, packed together in full sun, and the weevils are actually taking a bite out of the cashier register's contents. The lumber folk don’t like the weevils either because a severely bent tree is worthless for lumber.
Once white pines were dominant in northeast forests but they lost significant population due to lumbering over the past 200 years. So to the extent that the white pine weevil prevents the trees from being cut down by their worse predator, lumbering humans, this is so bad? While the weevils make life difficult for the (non-organic?) tree farmers (according to the growers' way of thinking), for the rest of us, though, the white pine weevil is one of nature's great pruners, toiling hard to beautify the roadsides and hilltops. Who knew?
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PICTURES: Samples of lovely multi-crowned white pines around town. Stamford CT October -November 2005
Saving the bugs, saves the birds: But that's not the end of the story. Each specialized bug also has its predators, which have their predators, and so on. In the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service's leaflet devoted solely to the white pine weevil Forest Insect& Disease Leaflet 21, they note that the white pine weevil is food for certain other insects, and for birds such as nuthatches, woodpeckers, chickadees, grosbeaks, and warblers, and small rodents such as voles, field mice, and shrews.
So if we were to somehow eradicate the white pine weevils, not only would our sky lines be much less interesting, the bug's predators and parasites could starve to death or at least lessen in number and then be vulnerable to other threats that turn marginal species into extinct ones.
What we don't know: Lastly, keep in mind that we don't know much about Nature and her works. A century ago, we didn't know that most trees can not live without symbiotic root fungi. The flora and fauna are an interdependent net evolved to balance. Touch any part, and all other parts have to shift until balance returns. Ignorance of the consequences doesn't change the result. Further, with Nature, "balancing out" can quite dramatic-- think of earthquakes and thunder storms. When it comes to the flora and fauna, it can mean that whole species will die, even regional climates can change.
So, honor your bugs. When you see a hole in the leaf of your prized whatever, think of the whole chain of life that starts with this little bug.
Credits: This article was inspired by, and is dedicated to, the work of "MJ from Iowa" , a self-taught naturalist (like me, only better) who is helping re-construct the prairie, while championing the cause of our native bugs. MJ is also an awesome nature photographer. MJ doesn't have a personal web site yet, but we can hope….

PICTURE: full view of white pine in top picture June 2005..
Photo credits: Sue Sweeney
© Sue Sweeney 2005


Comments (1)
Your site is great. Educational and fun. Keep it up.
Posted by joe | December 19, 2005 7:11 PM
Posted on December 19, 2005 19:11