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Insect-driven tree mortality is rising across Europe, finds an international study led by the Czech University of Life Sciences with participation of WSL. Conifers are hit harder, broadleaf damage declines. Warm, dry regions are most affected. The results, published in Global Change Biology, can help forest management by informing species choice and climate adaptation.
    * Bark- and wood-borer impacts on conifers increased substantially in the 21st century, while defoliation by moths decreased across Europe.
* Disturbance of conifers is driven largely by the spruce bark beetle; in contrast, broadleaved trees are impacted by several species, potentially complicating monitoring and control.
* Species once considered resilient – such as pine and fir – show increasing insect damage, raising concerns about their future suitability.
* Disturbance levels are consistently higher in warmer and drier parts of Europe, signalling elevated future risk under continued warming.
* Populations of insects that share hosts or feeding strategies tend to rise and fall together, increasing the likelihood of continent-scale pulses of tree mortality.
* There is no simple north–south gradient. Regional climate variability and extreme events often outweigh latitudinal effects in insect disturbance patterns.
* Damage from tree pathogens and non-native invasive species was not addressed, but also warrants more attention as seen in the case of ash dieback, for example.
Tree-feeding insects are affecting Europe’s forests increasingly but in uneven ways, according to an international study published in Global Change Biology. The international team from 17 European countries, including WSL for Switzerland, reports that wood-boring insects are causing increasing damage to multiple conifer species, while defoliation caused by caterpillars of different moth species has been declining in recent years. Across temperate and boreal Europe, insect disturbance is consistently higher in warmer and drier regions, indicating the risk of large, sudden impacts as climate extremes intensify.
“Our results show a clear signal: conifer-dominated forests are increasingly vulnerable to wood- and bark-boring insects, in particular the spruce bark beetle, while broadleaved tree species are experiencing decreasing levels of damage from a more diverse group of insects,” said Tomáš Hlásny, the study’s lead author from the Czech University of Life Sciences Prague. “These findings are important, providing guidance for forest management, tree species choice, climate change adaptation, and planning of future timber markets”.
Why it matters
The findings support policies that shift forest management toward more climate-resilient tree species compositions, with the dominance of broadleaved species, alongside stronger, interoperable monitoring of forest disturbance and data sharing across countries. “We need adaptation strategies that reflect diverging disturbance trends and uneven exposure levels across Europe’s forests,” Hlásny said. “This requires effort in coordinated forest risk monitoring, harmonized data collection and sharing, and guidance that can be acted upon by managers and inform markets.”
Researchers compiled annual disturbance records from 15 European countries for more than two decades (2000–2022), including data from Swiss Forest Protection and the Swiss National Forest Inventory, which is led by the WSL. The dataset represents 1,361 time series for 50 insect species. The team analysed trends by feeding guild (borers vs. defoliators), host tree species group (conifers vs. broadleaves), and geographic/climatic gradients. The work also introduced a novel harmonized disturbance dataset designed to complement existing monitoring and support future research.
    
Country	Responsible expert	Contact
Austria	Gernot Hoch	gernot.hoch@bfw.gv.at
Bulgaria	Georgi Georgiev	ggeorgiev.fri@gmail.com
Croatia	Milan Pernek	milanp@sumins.hr
Czechia	Tomáš Hlásny	hlasny@fld.czu.cz
Finland	Tiina Ylioja	tiina.ylioja@luke.fi
France	Hervé Jactel	herve.jactel@inrae.fr
Germany	Henrik Hartmann	henrik.hartmann@julius-kuehn.de
Germany	Rupert Seidl	rupert.seidl@tum.de
Hungary	György Csóka	csoka.gyorgy@uni-sopron.hu
Italy	Massimo Faccoli	massimo.faccoli@unipd.it
Lithuania	Gediminas Brazaitis	gediminas.brazaitis@vdu.lt
Norway	Paal Krokene	paal.krokene@nibio.no
Poland	Wojciech Grodzki	W.Grodzki@ibles.waw.pl
Romania	Mihai-Leonard Duduman	mduduman@usm.ro
Serbia	Slobodan Milanovic	slobodan.milanovic@sfb.bg.ac.rs
Slovakia	Jozef Vakula	jozef.vakula@nlcsk.org
Slovenia	Maarten de Groot	maarten.degroot@gozdis.si
Sweden	Martin Schroeder	martin.schroeder@slu.se
Switzerland	Eckehard Brockerhoff	eckehard.brockerhoff@wsl.ch
Hlásny T., Modlinger R., Gohli J., Seidl R., Krokene P., Bernardinelli I., … Liebhold A.M. (2025) Divergent trends in insect disturbance across Europe's temperate and boreal Forests. Glob. Chang. Biol. 31(11), e70580 (19 pp.). https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.70580
https://www.wsl.ch/en/news/tree-mortality-from-insects-is-rising-across-europe/
Forest damage from wood- and bark-borers has significantly increased across Europe. Such infestation ...
Source: (Photo: Simon Blaser)
    Criteria of this press release: 
     Journalists
     Environment / ecology, Zoology / agricultural and forest sciences
     transregional, national
     Research projects, Research results
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