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Mountain Pine Beetle Detection and Management in Alberta

Mountain Pine Beetle Detection and Management in Alberta. Ground Survey Procedures. Course Revised 11/2010. Aerial surveys. Ground Surveys. Control. MPB Monitoring & Control. August September October November December January February March April May June July.

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Mountain Pine Beetle Detection and Management in Alberta

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  1. Mountain Pine BeetleDetection and Managementin Alberta Ground Survey Procedures Course Revised 11/2010

  2. Aerial surveys Ground Surveys Control MPB Monitoring & Control August September October November December January February March April May June July GPS locations of suspected beetle-killed trees Locations of trees to be treated - confirmed MPB infestation

  3. Ground Surveys • Aim: 100% detection of trees with current MPB attacks based on the aerial survey information

  4. List of Equipment • GPS, Compass and Map • Knife/Hatchet • Clinometer and DBH Tape • Red and Pink Pest Management flagging tape • Black permanent marker, pencils • Data sheets

  5. Data collection Record all the data in the appropriate slots on the MPB concentric survey data sheet

  6. Natural Resources Canada GPS Set Up N51°11.0551’ latitude, W-116°21.1001’ longitude • Set up the GPS • Set to NAD83 • Collect data in • degrees/minutes/decimal minutes

  7. Header Information • Fill in the header information • Project Manager will supply • Project name • Corporate Area, Infestation and site # • Beetle year is Aug 15 of current year to Aug 14 of following year • The current beetle year is 2011; it extends from August 15, 2011 to August 14, 2012

  8. Access to Plot • Indicate the mode of transport used to access the site • Record the GPS coordinates for the access location and the positional accuracy  

  9. Locating Plot Centre • Use GPS coordinates provided to find the red/fader tree at the plot centre • If the GPS location was derived during a Heli-GPS survey, it will be associated with a red or fading tree. • If GPS point is not close to red/fading trees, do a 25 meter sweep to locate red/fading trees. • If red/fading trees at GPS point is non-mpb tree, do a 25 meter sweep to ensure no MPB trees at the site. • Select an uninfested tree close to the fading tree as the plot centre.

  10. Plot Set Up • To mark plot center, double flag the selected tree with red pest management flagging • Label the flagging with • beetle year • site number • the words “PLOT CENTRE” • survey date e.g. 2011 4 PLOT CENTRE Jan 14

  11. Plot Set Up Describe how you got to the site (e.g. approx 75m north from NE corner of wellsite), and any safety or other unique issues Record GPS coordinates of the plot centre and the positional accuracy  

  12. Plot Set Up • Measure 50 m from the plot centre along each cardinal direction • Flag 25 m and 50 m marks along each cardinal line with red pest management flagging • Flagging must be tied onto an uninfested tree, or if a tree can not be found then any suitable marker can be used to tie a flag • Ensure that the knot of each flagging is facing the plot centre

  13. Plot Set Up • Label each flag with the • beetle year • site number • cardinal direction and • distance from the plot centre e.g. 2011 4 S 25m

  14. Survey Procedure • Systematically examine every pine tree in each quadrant of the plot for entrance holes and/or boring dust • Use red flagging as reference points

  15. N 2011 4 N 50 m 2011 4 N 25 m Record GPS location 2011 4 E 25 m 2011 4 W 25 m 2011 4 E 50 m 2011 4 W 50 m 2011 4 PLOT CENTRE Jan 14 2011 4 S 25 m 2011 4 S 50 m

  16. Infested trees • Flag each infested tree with live MPB brood with pink pest management tape labeled with • beetle year • site #, • quadrant, and • consecutive tree # e.g. 2011-4-NW1, 2011-4-NW2, 2011-4-SW1, 2011-4-SW2…etc • Ensure flagging knots face the plot centre

  17. N 2011 4 N 50 m 2011 4 N 25 m 2011-4-NE1 2011-4-NW1 2011 4 E 25 m 2011 4 W 25 m 2011 4 E 50 m 2011 4 W 50 m 2011-4-SW1 2011 4 PLOT CENTRE Jan 14 2011-4-SE1 2011-4-SW2 2011 4 S 25 m 2011 4 S 50 m

  18. Tree with 40 or less entrance holes An infested tree is considered ‘Unsuccessfully Attacked’ if it has 40 or less entrance holes These trees do not require control Do not flag these trees Galleries do not have to be carved out

  19. MPB infested tree <15 cm in dbh An infested tree is considered ‘Unsuccessfully Attacked’ if it is less than 15cm dbh regardless of the number of entrance holes These trees do not require control Do not flag these trees Galleries do not have to be carved out

  20. Woodpecker damage Trees with woodpecker damage that meet the attack threshold will be pink flagged

  21. dbh dbh dbh 1 tree 2 trees 1 tree Concentric Survey:Forked Trees Count forked trees by the number of stems below dbh (1.3 m from the ground level), as illustrated below:

  22. Concentric Survey:Trees >15 cm dbh with living MPB brood & >40 hits Draw a dot at the approximate location of each of the trees requiring control (pink flagged trees) on the crosshair map on the data sheet.

  23. Trees >15 cm dbh with living MPB brood & >40 hits • If there are more than 10 pink flagged trees in the quadrant write the total # of trees in quadrant summary field • Do not draw dots on the map

  24. Representative Tree • Measure and record the DBH (include one decimal place) and tree height rounded to the nearest 0.5 meter of a tree representative of the currently infested trees in the plot (pink flagged) • See Appendix 1 of the manual for instructions on using a clinometer to measure tree heights • Write the words “REP TREE” on the flagging of this tree • If there are only UA trees at the site, no “REP TREE” measurements are required.

  25.   Representative Tree • Map location of rep tree on data sheet field map using “R” R

  26. Limits on Plot Survey • If infested trees are only found within the 25 m inner circle, surveying beyond the 50 m markers is not required

  27. Mini-survey • If an infested tree is found between the 25 m and 50 m markers, complete a “mini survey” • -extend survey in the two nearest quadrants by another 10 m

  28. Mini-survey • Fill in the dotted line of the two “mini survey” quadrants on the map portion of the data sheet

  29. Mini-survey • Attacked trees found in the 10 m mini-survey may trigger a new concentric plot (additional) • project manager determines the number of such attacked trees needed to trigger a new plot • Unsuccessful attack (UA) trees do not trigger a new concentric plot • Trees found during the mini sweep are to be tallied with the original (parent) plot.

  30. Schematic Diagram Figure 1. Layout of a concentric plot

  31. Mini survey Triggers a New Plot • Move the new (additional) plot centre 50 m from the edge of the original (parent) plot, along the same bearing from the original plot centre to the tree/s in the mini sweep • Avoid overlap with other plots • If the additional plot location does not meet a threshold of >25% pine composition (of stems DBH>15cm) then the plot can be moved up to 50m in either direction while staying 50m from the parent plot edge • If a suitable location is not found it can be dropped with comments explaining the situation

  32. Mini survey Triggers a New Plot • Tally the mini sweep trees with the parent plot • Number the additional plot by using the original adjacent site number and a letter. • For example, if a green tree is identified outside the 50 m plot boundary near site number 4, the new site number will be 4a.

  33. Mini survey Triggers a New Plot 10 m If mini-surveys are triggered around the entire parent plot (i.e. two mini-surveys), the trees in the portions of the mini-surveys bordering any two adjacent quadrants will be combined to determine whether an additional plot will be triggered Mini survey Mini survey

  34. Tally Pink-flagged Trees • When plot is complete tally all pink flagged trees from the 4 quadrants in the appropriate red or green column  

  35. Red vs. Green Trees • When tallying pink flagged tree into the Red or Green color classes: • A tree is Red only if 100% of the foliage is red • Green trees may show various levels of fading

  36. Total Pink-flagged Trees • Total and record pink flagged trees with green & red needles as shown below This + This = 

  37. Recording UA Trees Count the number of UA trees and record the total number of UA trees in the plot on the data sheet • Attacked trees that are smaller that <15cm DBH, or have 40 or less hits 

  38. 5-Needle Pines • Whitebark and limber pine have been designated as Endangered in Alberta. • If either of these species are attacked in the plot, record the number of attacked trees in the appropriate box on the datasheet. • The attacked whitebark and limber pine are not totalled separately from the trees with live brood total. e.g., if there are 7 trees attacked in the plot and 3 of them are limber pine, record 7 in the ‘Total’ and 3 in ‘Limber Pine’  

  39. Plots with pheromone-baited trees • Some of the sites may be baited with pheromones • Collect all the baits and existing flagging and give those to the project manager • Re-flag any currently infested trees by following the procedure given earlier • Enter the removed bait numbers on the data sheet 

  40. Previously Identified Trees • For any trees that have flagging and numbers from a previous years operations or trees numbered during a summer program, the Project Manager will determine if the old trees need treatment (possible 2 year lifecycle). • For old trees that do not require treatment (i.e. beetles have developed and flown) remove the existing flagging. • For old trees that still require treatment, remove all old flagging and replace it with new pink flagging. Label them using the new numbering system outlined earlier.

  41. Surveys: Comments • Comment, comment, comment • Very important to fill in • Will help QI assessors understand why calls were made • May assist control crews      

  42. Absorbed Plots • If GPS locations of other sites are found within a parent concentric plot, record the absorbed site number on the datasheet in the Survey Comments box. • Do not perform another concentric survey and do not fill in a tally card for the absorbed site.

  43. Incidental Sites • While walking from the access location or from site to site, surveyors may detect current attacked trees that are not associated with fading or red trees • The Project Manager will determine how many current attacked trees are required to complete a survey • UA trees do not warrant an incidental plot • Not all Forest Areas require incidental surveys –determined at start-up meeting

  44. Survey Performance Measures The acceptable tolerances for surveys are listed below • No penalty will be assessed if within these limits:

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