Insect pests in intensively-managed eucalypt plantations in Australia: Some thoughts on this challenge to a new era in forest management
- 1 January 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Australian Forestry
- Vol. 53 (1) , 7-12
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00049158.1990.10676055
Abstract
The area of intensively-managed eucalypt plantations in Australia is expanding and may increase more rapidly in the next decade. Some of the insect problems associated with these plantations are likely to be different and may even have a greater economic impact than those occurring in native forests. The attitudes of forest managers towards insect problems associated with eucalypt plantations are discussed. The limited knowledge of the ecology of eucalypt-feeding insects in Australia is highlighted and insect problems that have occurred, and those likely to occur in eucalypt plantations, are discussed. The integrated management approach to insect problems in eucalypt plantations is emphasised and important areas for research are identified.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Why Are There So Few Tree-Killing Bark Beetles Associated with Angiosperms?Oikos, 1989
- Is insect defoliation in eucalypt forests greater than that in other temperate forests?Austral Ecology, 1984
- DIFFERENTIAL DEFOLIATION BY INSECTS AMONG PROVENANCES OF EUCALYPTUS DELEGATENSISAustralian Journal of Entomology, 1984
- Phytophagous insect communities in the canopies of three Eucalyptus forest types in south-eastern AustraliaAustral Ecology, 1983
- Leaf consumption by insects in three Eucalyptus forest types in Southeastern Australia and their role in short-term nutrient cyclingOecologia, 1983
- Estimates of damage by herbivorous insects onEucalyptustreesAustralian Journal of Ecology, 1983
- ARTHROPOD COMMUNITIES IN THE CROWNS OF THE NATURAL AND PLANTED STANDS OF PINUS RADIATA (MONTEREY PINE) IN CALIFORNIAThe Canadian Entomologist, 1981
- Predation of Cossid Moth Larvae by Yellow-Tailed Black Cockatoos Causing Losses in Plantations of Eucalyptus Grandis in North Coastal New South Wales.Wildlife Research, 1978
- The Significance of Phytophagous Insects in the Eucalyptus Forests of AustraliaProceedings in Life Sciences, 1977
- INSECT DAMAGE TO PLANTATION-GROWN EUCALYPTS IN NORTH COASTAL NEW SOUTH WALES, WITH PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO CHRISTMAS BEETLES (COLEOPTERA: SCARABAEIDAE)Australian Journal of Entomology, 1974