Northern Pine Weevil – Pissodes approximatus
Northern Pine Weevil (Pissodes approximatus)
Latin Name: Pissodes approximatus
Common Name: Northern Pine Weevil
Appearance:
The northern pine weevil regularly reproduces on stumps of felled trees, and as populations grow, it becomes a problem in plantations.
- Adults eat branches and terminals, which can kill them and cause bushiness or twisted stems. Because there is relatively little breeding material remaining around, this bug rarely harms landscapes.
- Tiny holes in the bark of small twigs and branches are chewed by the mature male squirrel, leaving it vulnerable to damage.
- In bitten regions, bark may break away, and shoots and twigs may die, leaving reddish dead tips that are ugly.
- Chewing commonly occurs around the ends of branches on big trees, leading them to lose some of their bark.
- Most insects are not pests. Only those who eat attractive plants or spread illness are a nuisance to gardeners. Predators, pollinators, and parasitoids are the three sorts of valuable insects.
- Lady beetles, praying mantids, green and brown lacewings, ground beetles, damsel bugs, syrphid fly larvae, and snakeflies are predatory insects.
- Spiders, predaceous spider mites, and centipedes are vital in garden ecology.
- Several bee and fly species are pollinators of insects. Honeybees, bumblebees, orchard mason bees, and syrphid flies are the essential pollinators in home gardens, but many other pollinators also play a role.