Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-ndmmz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-30T19:42:51.264Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

PREDATION BY RED SQUIRRELS ON THE SPRUCE BUDWORM CHORISTONEURA FUMIFERANA (CLEM.) (LEPIDOPTERA: TORTRICIDAE)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

Daniel T. Jennings
Affiliation:
Northeastern Forest Experiment Station, USDA Building, University of Maine, Orono, Maine, USA04469
Hewlette S. Crawford Jr.
Affiliation:
Northeastern Forest Experiment Station, USDA Building, University of Maine, Orono, Maine, USA04469

Extract

Predators of the spruce budworm, Choristoneura fumijerana (Clem.), include both invertebrates and vertebrates (Jennings and Crawford 1985). Birds are the best known and most extensively studied vertebrate predators, but because of their arboreal and omnivorous feeding habits, the deer mouse, Peromyscus maniculatus (Bangs), and the red squirrel, Tamiasciurus hudsonicus (Bangs), often are implicated as potential predators of budworm larvae and pupae (Morris et al. 1958; Morris 1963; Otvos 1981; Welsh 1983). In laboratory feeding trials, W.F. Chesire estimated that red squirrels had a mean food capacity of 600–700 mature larvae or pupae of the spruce budworm per day (Morris 1963). R.T. Mitchell examined the stomach contents of 25 red squirrels collected during a major spruce budworm outbreak in northern Maine (Dowden et al. 1953); he found that spruce budworms made up 51% of their total food. On the basis of these results, Dowden et al. (1953) estimated that a red squirrel could eat 400–500 larvae per day.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1989

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Crawford, H.S. Jr., and Jennings, D.T.. 1982. Relationships of birds and spruce budworms—literature review and annotated bibliography. USDA, For. Serv., Bibliog. Lit. Agric. 23. 38 pp.Google Scholar
Crawford, H.S. Jr., and Jennings, D.T. 1989. Predation by birds on spruce budworm Choristoneura fumiferana: functional, numerical, and total responses. Ecology 70: 152163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dowden, P.B., Jaynes, H.A., and Carolin, V.M.. 1953. The role of birds in a spruce budworm outbreak in Maine. J. econ. Ent. 46: 307312.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jennings, D.T., and Crawford, H.S. Jr., 1985. Predators of the spruce budworm. USDA, For. Serv., Agric. Handb. 644. 77 pp.Google Scholar
Morris, R.F. 1963. Predation and the spruce budworm. pp. 244248in Morris, R.F. (Ed.), The Dynamics of Epidemic Spruce Budworm Populations. Mem. ent. Soc. Can. 31.Google Scholar
Morris, R.F., Chesire, W.F., Miller, C.A., and Mott, D.G.. 1958. The numerical response of avain and mammalian predators during a gradation of the spruce budworm. Ecology 39: 487494.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Otvos, I.S. 1981. Predators. pp. 103104in Hudak, J., and Raske, A.G. (Eds.), Review of the Spruce Budworm Outbreak in Newfoundland—Its Control and Forest Management Implications. Can. For. Serv., Nfld. For. Res. Cent. Inf. Rep. N-X-205.Google Scholar
Welsh, D.A. 1983. The relationship between spruce budworm and wildlife. pp. 2733in Sanders, C.J., and Carrow, J.R. (Co-Chrm.), The Spruce Budworm Problem in Ontario—Real or Imaginary? Can. For. Serv., Grt. Lakes For. Res. Cent., Symp. Proc. O-P-11.Google Scholar