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PESTS AND DISEASES OF FORESTRY IN NEW ZEALAND


 Pachycotes peregrinus, a native borer in moist logs and slow-seasoning forest produce





Forest and Timber Insects in New Zealand No. 19

Revised 2009
Based on J. Bain (1977)
 
Insect:
Pachycotes peregrinus (Chapuis) (Coleoptera: Scolytidae)
 
 
 

Fig. 1 - Pachycotes peregrinus adult.
 
Type of injury
Pachycotes peregrinus is a borer in moist logs and slow-seasoning forest produce such as posts
and poles. Freshly sawn timber may be attacked, especially between the boards, when stored
under damp conditions. The first evidence of attack is the presence of circular holes about 2.5
mm in diameter through which white frass (bore dust) is ejected. The entry and brood tunnels of
the adult are kept free of frass, and in fresh logs they are found only in the outermost sapwood.
The larval tunnels vary in diameter according to the size of the larva and are lined with clay-like
frass. Material such as logs in contact with the ground which retain a high moisture content can
be repeatedly re-infested, and the wood becomes riddled with adult and larval tunnels.
 

Hosts
All exotic softwoods of economic importance are attacked. Native softwoods, including
Prumnopitys ferruginea (miro), P. taxifolia (matai), Dacrycarpus dacrydioides (kahikatea),
Dacrydium cupressinum
(rimu), Agathis australis (kauri), and Phyllocladus alpinus (mountain
toatoa), are also utilised.
 

Distribution
This native beetle occurs throughout New Zealand except in the drier pine forests, e.g. Balmoral
and Eyrewell in Canterbury.

Economic importance
Logs stockpiled in the forest near breeding sites may be attacked but damage is not usually
significant because the initial galleries are mainly in the outer sapwood and are removed with the
slab during sawing. The larvae die during seasoning but timber sawn from infested material may
be degraded by the sapstain fungi associated with the beetles. Freshly sawn timber may be
attacked if stored under damp conditions. Pachycotes peregrinus is not often present in export
logs, but if it is then export is prohibited.
 

Description, life history, and habits
The adult (Fig. 1), which is about 4.7 mm long, resembles Hylastes ater but is relatively stouter
and has a slightly more humped profile when viewed from the side. The pronotum is dull and not
shining as in
H.ater
. Both H. ater and P. peregrinus beetles may be confused with Hylurgus
ligniperda
, but the latter is larger (about 6 mm long) and has a hairy appearance. The three
beetles are shown in Fig.2. The larvae of all three species are white C-shaped, legless grubs with
light yellowish-brown head capsules.
Pachycotes peregrinus ejects granular white frass from the
entry tunnel but the frass of H. ater
and H. ligniperda is reddish-brown. Pachycotes peregrinus
bores in the wood but H. ater
and H. ligniperda tunnels are made in the bark, or just under it, and
this accounts for the different colours of frass. Platypus apicalis, a native pinhole borer, also
makes white frass but this consists of fine strands of wood and has a fibrous rather than granular
appearance.
 
 
 

Fig. 2 - Three beetles which may be mistaken for each other: (A) Hylastes ater
, (B) Hylurgus
ligniperda
, (C) Pachycotes peregrinus . Note differences in shape of rear edge of pronotum.
 
Adult
P. peregrinus emerge during the summer months and attack logs, stumps, etc. They enter
wood at right angles to the grain and construct brood tunnels parallel with the grain. The entry
tunnel is usually about 24 mm long and the brood tunnel about 150-200 mm. The female lays
eggs into small notches cut in the sides of the brood tunnel. The larvae, starting from these
notches, bore at right angles to the brood tunnel but usually soon curve around (Fig. 3). The
larval tunnels are widened as the larvae grow, the larvae working back and forth over their initial
paths and lining the tunnels with clay-like frass. The larval tunnelling pattern soon becomes
confused and tunnels extend in all directions (Fig. 4). The duration of the larval stage is not
known exactly but very likely it is almost two years. The larvae pupate anywhere along the length
of the tunnels and the new adults cut individual exits to the surface or emerge through earlier
workings.
 
 
 

Fig. 3 - Pachycotes peregrinus brood tunnels in which eggs were laid. The round holes are
tunnels made by larvae boring at right angles and then curving around.
 
 
 

Fig. 4 - Pachycotes peregrinus larval workings in radiata pine.
 
Control
Prompt extraction and sawing of logs after felling will minimise defects in sawn timber.

Bibliography
Bain J. 1977: Pachycotes peregrinus  (Chapuis) (Coleoptera: Scolytidae). New Zealand Forest
Service, Forest and Timber Insects in New Zealand No. 19.
 


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