This book provides an introduction to forest entomology, the principles and techniques of forest insect pest management, the different forest insect guilds/feeding groups, and relevant forest insect pest management case studies. In addition to covering 30% of the earth, forest ecosystems provide numerous timber and non-timber products that affect our daily lives and recreational opportunities, habitat for diverse animal communities, watershed protection, play critical roles in the water cycle, and mitigate soil erosion and global warming. In addition to being the most abundant organisms in forest ecosystems, insects perform numerous functions in forests, many of which are beneficial and critical to forest health. Conversely, some insects damage and/or kill trees and reduce the capacity of forests to provide desired ecosystem services. The target audience of this book is upper-level undergraduate and graduate students and professionals interested in forest health and entomology.
SECTION I - General Entomology
Chapter 1. The Importance and Diversity of Insects
Chapter 2. Form and Function
Chapter 3. Insect Ecology
Chapter 4. Insect Behavior
SECTION II - Forest Insect Pest Management
Chapter 5. Forest Insect Biodiversity
Chapter 6. Integrated Pest Management: the Forest Context
Chapter 7. Forest Health
Chapter 8. Forest Insect Population Dynamics
Chapter 9. Forest Insect-Plant Interactions
Chapter 10. Forest Insect-Natural Enemy Interactions
Chapter 11. Population Models and Forest Pest Management
Chapter 12. Monitoring Forest Insects and their Damage
Chapter 13. Silviculture
Chapter 14. Insects and Forest Succession
SECTION III - Insect Guilds/Feeding Groups: IPM and Case Studies
Chapter 15. Invasive Species
Chapter 16. Foliage Feeders
Chapter 17. Bark Beetles
Chapter 18. Ambrosia Beetles
Chapter 19. Woodborers
Chapter 20. Sucking Insects
Chapter 21. Gall Insects
Chapter 22. Tip, Shoot, Root and Reproduction Weevils
Chapter 23. Insects of Reproductive Structures
Jeremy D. Allison is a Research Scientist with the Canadian Forest Service, Group Leader of the Satellite Lab in Applied Chemical Ecology, Forestry and Agricultural Biotechnology Institute, University of Pretoria and an adjunct assistant professor in the John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Design at the University of Toronto. He studies the behavioural and chemical ecology of forest insects.
Timothy Paine is Distinguished Professor and Entomologist, Emeritus, Tokuji and Bettie L. Furuta Endowed Chair, and UC Riverside Distinguished Teaching Professor in the Department of Entomology at the University of California Riverside. He studies integrated management of invasive insects in urban and recreational forest systems, biological control, insect symbioses, and behaviour of parasitoids and their hosts.
Bernard Slippers is the Director of the Tree Protection Cooperative Programme and the Forestry and Agricultural Biotechnology Institute (FABI) at the University of Pretoria. He studies the molecular ecology, evolution and management of insects and micro-organisms that affect plant health.
Michael Wingfield is a Research Professor at the Forestry and Agricultural Biotechnology Institute (FABI), Advisor to the Executive of the University of Pretoria, and the Immediate Past President of the International Union of Forestry Research Organisations (IUFRO). His research is focused on the identification and global movement of insects and microbial pathogens impacting the health of trees in natural woody ecosystems and planted forests.