Saturday, June 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

Drought-Stressed B.C. Timber Could Face Threat From Hungry Bark Beetles

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Aug, 2015 10:45 AM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A B.C. government entomologist in Kamloops says the current drought across most of the southern half of the province is stressing timber across the Interior.
     
    Lorraine Maclauchlan says photosynthesis drops when water is scarce, making trees more vulnerable to damaging attacks from insects such as bark beetles.
     
    The beetles bore through bark and munch on the nutrient-carrying layer just underneath, so Maclauchlan says trees use resin as a defence,  pumping out the sticky fluid in order to flush away attacking insects.
     
    But without water, trees can't produce enough resin to defend themselves.
     
    Maclauchlan says healthy, standing timber should not suffer an immediate impact from this year's drought but warns the lack of water could have a cumulative effect.
     
    She says a sustained drought over a number of years could allow populations of bugs such as mountain pine beetles to build to potentially dangerous levels. (CHNL)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Government Approves Construction Projects For $9-Billion Site C Hydro Dam

    B.C. Government Approves Construction Projects For $9-Billion Site C Hydro Dam
    FORT ST. JOHN, B.C. — The British Columbia government has granted approval for the first phase of construction to start on the massive Site C hydroelectric dam project on the Peace River.

    B.C. Government Approves Construction Projects For $9-Billion Site C Hydro Dam

    Quebec To Go To Court To Challenge National Securities Regulator

    Quebec To Go To Court To Challenge National Securities Regulator
    QUEBEC — The Quebec government says it will ask the province's top court to rule on the constitutionality of Ottawa's plan to create a national securities regulator.

    Quebec To Go To Court To Challenge National Securities Regulator

    Kitimat's Cleaner, More Productive Smelter Pours First Aluminum

    Kitimat's Cleaner, More Productive Smelter Pours First Aluminum
    KITIMAT, B.C. — A ceremonial first pour of molten metal at Rio Tinto Alcan's aluminum plant Tuesday marked the completion of a multibillion-dollar modernization project in the northern British Columbia community of Kitimat.

    Kitimat's Cleaner, More Productive Smelter Pours First Aluminum

    B.C. Plane Crash Sends One To Hospital, Closes Highway 97 In Southern Okanagan

    B.C. Plane Crash Sends One To Hospital, Closes Highway 97 In Southern Okanagan
    Spokesman Bill Yearwood says the plane ended up on Highway 97 near Osoyoos on Tuesday evening and its only occupant escaped before flames engulfed the aircraft.

    B.C. Plane Crash Sends One To Hospital, Closes Highway 97 In Southern Okanagan

    Body Of Australian Tourist Found In Industrial Area Outside Whistler

    Body Of Australian Tourist Found In Industrial Area Outside Whistler
    A spokeswoman for the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says 19-year-old Jake Kermond had been staying in the resort town since March.

    Body Of Australian Tourist Found In Industrial Area Outside Whistler

    When Is A Taxi Not A Taxi? A Drunk Abbotsford Driver Learns The Hard Way

    When Is A Taxi Not A Taxi? A Drunk Abbotsford Driver Learns The Hard Way
    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — A drunk driver in Abbotsford, B.C., is getting no sympathy for a belated decision to pocket his car keys and grab a cab.

    When Is A Taxi Not A Taxi? A Drunk Abbotsford Driver Learns The Hard Way