02009naa a2200205 a 450000100080000000500110000800800410001910000200006024500720008026000090015252014940016165000160165565000130167165000110168465000110169565000100170665300110171670000180172777300580174512796672025-02-19 1983 bl uuuu u00u1 u #d1 aDAHLSTEN, D. L. aInsect pest management in forest ecosystems.h[electronic resource] c1983 aUnderstanding the role of insects in forest ecosystems is vital to the development of environmentally and economically sound pest management strategies in forestry Most of the research on forest insects has been confined to phytophagous species associated with economically important tree species The roles of most other insects in forest environments have generally been ignored, including the natural enemies and associates of phytophagous species identified as being important In the past few years several investigations have begun to reevaluate the role of phytophagous species responsible for perturbation in forest ecosystems, and it appears that these species may be playing an important role in the primary productivity of those ecosystems Also, there is an increasing awareness that forest pest managers have been treating the symptoms and not the causes of the problems in the forest Many insect problems are associated with poor sites or sites where trees are growing poorly because of crowding As a result, there is considerable emphasis on the hazard rating of stands of trees for their susceptibillty to various phytophagous insects The next step is to manipulate forest stands to make them less susceptible to forest pest complexes A thinning study in California is used as an example and shows that tree mortality in ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) attributable to the western pine beetle (Dendroctonus brevicomis) can be reduced by commercial thinning to reduce stocking aEcossistema aFloresta aInseto aManejo aPraga aForest1 aROWNEY, D. L. tEnvironmental Managementgv. 7, n. 1, p. 65-72, 1983.