Bark beetles have been eating trees in Forest lands by the - TopicsExpress



          

Bark beetles have been eating trees in Forest lands by the millions (some 46 million acres of forest in the western United States and Canada over the last decade, since around 2003). What causes bark beetles to infest forests on this massive scale? Are they able to eat better with PX around, or are the trees losing immunity to them? Why are the numbers of tree infestations declining now as most articles and graphs show in 2013? fs.usda.gov/barkbeetle fs.usda.gov/detail/r2/forest-grasslandhealth/?cid=stelprdb5408531 nfdp.ccfm.org/data/graphs/graph_41_b_e.php Can the Zetas please explain how insects are being affected by the changes in the Earth and Sun patterns, plates and atmosphere? In Oregon 25K bumble bees had a mass die off in a single event recently. theblaze/stories/2013/06/21/what-caused-the-mass-death-of-25000-bumble-bees-in-a-target-parking-lot/ Oregon State brought investigators to check over the situation. examiner/article/bee-kill-off-50-000-bees-dropping-from-oregon-trees-was-man-made-happening The investigators marked pesticides as the official explanation. kgw/news/State-investigating-death-of-25000-bumble-bees-212248091.html (25,000 bees die off) nbcnews/id/52276914/ (50,000 bees now?) latimes/news/nation/nationnow/la-na-nn-bumble-bees-die-in-oregon-20130621,0,1466945.story This explanation sounds similar to explanations given by the mainstream about animal die-offs and the like. Increasing global pollution seems to have become the excuse to write off everything under one umbrella: animals affected, insect infestations, weather anomalies and such. [and from another] microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Bark_Beetles_and_Symbiotic_Fungi Bark beetles destroy stands of trees every year by having a symbiotic relationship with fungi. These fungi are devastating to the health of the tree. What mankind sees in the fauna and flora around him is the status quo that has been established over the econs. Species have died out, and evolution is continuous, but man is shocked to find the balanced state in nature becoming unbalanced in his lifetime. Life is opportunistic. Trees are attacked by fungus or virus or bacteria, often carried by insects that burrow under the bark. They develop resistance or the species dies out. The American Elm was brought to the US from Europe, and subsequently killed by Dutch Elm Disease in this manner. Climate change exacerbates the changes that can affect all species, and this is likewise affected by faltering immune systems stressed by surging sub-atomic particle flows caused by Planet X. Life will prevail, despite setbacks, and establish a new equilibrium.
Posted on: Sat, 29 Jun 2013 00:31:38 +0000

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