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00:00:00
This episode of Deep Look is brought to you by CuriosityStream.
00:00:16
Behold the mighty ponderosa pine, nearly a hundred feet tall.
00:00:22
It rises above it all, right?
00:00:25
Except for this little guy, the size of a grain of rice.
00:00:31
The western pine beetle is the nemesis of millions of ponderosa across California.
00:00:38
And she’s on a mission: get into this pine tree.
00:00:45
As she starts boring in, it looks like the tree is just standing there, helpless.
00:00:51
But a secret weapon flows beneath its bark.
00:00:55
It’s not sap.
00:00:58
It’s resin, the tree’s defense.
00:01:04
As the beetle digs, the tree oozes resin.
00:01:08
The beetle fights the deluge, going in and out, in and out, to keep the pathway clear.
00:01:20
They trap air under their wings, like a scuba diver, so they can breathe even when they’re
00:01:29
completely coated.
00:01:31
It’s a battle of endurance.
00:01:36
If the tree is healthy, it can produce so much resin that the beetle gets exhausted
00:01:42
and trapped as it hardens.
00:01:52
But when there’s a drought and the trees aren’t getting much water, they simply can’t
00:02:06
make enough.
00:02:10
She gets in and sends out pheromones to call her friends.
00:02:16
They go straight to one of the tree’s most vital tissues: the phloem, a super-thin layer
00:02:24
under the bark.
00:02:26
The phloem moves nutrients around the tree.
00:02:30
It’s a little bit like our blood vessels.
00:02:34
The beetles eat their way through it, carving these winding tunnels … which is why their
00:02:40
nickname is “drunken beetles.”
00:02:42
Eventually, they cut off the flow of nutrients and the tree dies … millions of trees if
00:02:50
it’s a serious drought.
00:02:55
And the beetles do even more damage.
00:02:57
They’ve laid their eggs inside the tunnels.
00:03:02
After their larvae hatch, they wiggle their way out into the bark and finish growing there.
00:03:08
There isn’t much to eat in the bark.
00:03:11
But western pine beetle larvae come prepared with their own lunchboxes.
00:03:17
See that white fluffy stuff around this larva?
00:03:19
It’s a fungus its mother carried into the tree, a continually growing food supply.
00:03:29
Once the larvae mature, tens of thousands of them bust out of the tree … and fly off
00:03:35
to find new pines to try to start their own families.
00:03:41
Will the beetles succeed?
00:03:43
Or will the trees fight them off?
00:03:45
It’ll all depend on the weather.
00:03:49
Water is what tips the scale in this long-running struggle.
00:03:54
This episode is brought to you by CuriosityStream, a subscription streaming service that offers
00:03:59
documentaries and non-fiction titles from some of the world’s best filmmakers, including
00:04:03
exclusive originals.
00:04:05
Want to learn more about beetles and other insects?
00:04:08
CuriosityStream’s video series “Insect Dissection” investigates how insects evolved
00:04:13
to dominate our world.
00:04:14
To get unlimited access and your first two months free, sign up at curiositystream.com/deeplook
00:04:21
and use the promo code deeplook during the sign-up process.
00:04:24
Hi there.
00:04:25
It’s Lauren again.
00:04:27
Wow.
00:04:28
That larva is really moving.
00:04:30
Make sure not to miss any crazy behaviors from the natural world, and sign up for Deep
00:04:35
Look’s email newsletter.
00:04:36
Also, don’t forget to subscribe and click that little notification bell.
00:04:41
Thanks for watching Deep Look.

Description:

An onslaught of tiny western pine beetles can bring down a mighty ponderosa pine. But the forest fights back by waging a sticky attack of its own. Who will win the battle in the bark? SUBSCRIBE to Deep Look! https://www.youtube.com/user/KQEDDeepLook?sub_confirmation=1 DEEP LOOK is a ultra-HD (4K) short video series created by KQED San Francisco and presented by PBS Digital Studios. See the unseen at the very edge of our visible world. Get a new perspective on our place in the universe and meet extraordinary new friends. Explore big scientific mysteries by going incredibly small. * NEW VIDEOS EVERY OTHER TUESDAY! * Bark beetles are specialized, with each species attacking only one or a few species of trees. Ponderosa pines are attacked by dark brown beetles the size of a grain of rice called western pine beetles (Dendroctonus brevicomis). In the spring and summer, female western pine beetles fly around ponderosa pine stands looking for trees to lay their eggs in. As they start boring into a ponderosa, the tree oozes a sticky, viscous clear liquid called resin. If the tree is healthy, it can produce so much resin that the beetle gets exhausted and trapped as the resin hardens, which can kill it. “The western pine beetle is an aggressive beetle that in order to successfully reproduce has to kill the tree,” said U.S. Forest Service ecologist Sharon Hood, based in Montana. “So the tree has very evolved responses. With pines, they have a whole resin duct system. You can imagine these vertical and horizontal pipes.” But during California’s five-year drought, which ended earlier this year, ponderosa pines weren’t getting much water and couldn’t make enough resin to put up a strong defense. Beetles bored through the bark of millions of trees and sent out an aggregating pheromone to call more beetles and stage a mass attack. An estimated 102 million trees – most of them ponderosa – died in California between 2010 and 2016. -- What is resin? Resin – sometimes also called pitch – is a different substance from sap, though trees produce both. Resin is a sticky, viscous liquid that trees exude to heal over wounds and flush out bark beetles, said Sharon Hood, of the Forest Service. Sap, on the other hand, is the continuous water column that the leaves pull up to the top of the tree from its roots. --- Are dead trees a fire hazard? Standing dead trees that have lost their needles don’t increase fire risk, said forest health scientist Jodi Axelson, a University of California extension specialist based at UC Berkeley. But “once they fall to the ground you end up with these very heavy fuel loads,” she said, “and that undoubtedly is going to make fire behavior more intense.” And dead – or living – trees can fall on electric lines and ignite a fire, which is why agencies in California are prioritizing the removal of dead trees near power lines, said Axelson. ---+ Read the entire article about who’s winning the battle between ponderosa pines and western pine beetles in California, on KQED Science: https://www.kqed.org/science/1916487/with-california-drought-over-fewer-sierra-pines-dying ---+ For more information: Check out the USDA’s “Bark Beetles in California Conifers – Are Your Trees Susceptible?” https://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprdb5384837.pdf ---+ More Great Deep Look episodes: This Mushroom Starts Killing You Before You Even Realize It https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bl9aCH2QaQY&t=57s The Bombardier Beetle And Its Crazy Chemical Cannon https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWwgLS5tK80 There’s Something Very Fishy About These Trees … https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZWiWh5acbE ---+ See some great videos and documentaries from PBS Digital Studios! Vascular Plants = Winning! - Crash Course Biology #37 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h9oDTMXM7M8&index=37&list=PL3EED4C1D684D3ADF Julia Child Remixed | Keep On Cooking https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80ZrUI7RNfI ---+ Follow KQED Science: KQED Science: https://www.kqed.org/science Tumblr: http://kqedscience.tumblr.com Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/kqedscience ---+ About KQED KQED, an NPR and PBS affiliate in San Francisco, CA, serves Northern California and beyond with a public-supported alternative to commercial TV, Radio and web media. Funding for Deep Look is provided in part by PBS Digital Studios and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. Deep Look is a project of KQED Science, which is also supported by HopeLab, the S. D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation, the Dirk and Charlene Kabcenell Foundation, the Vadasz Family Foundation, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the Smart Family Foundation and the members of KQED. #deeplook

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