Alberta to spend $55 million fighting pine beetle
Last Updated: Monday, May 5, 2008 | 11:48 AM PT
CBC News
The Alberta government is pumping another $50 million in emergency funding into fighting the mountain pine beetle, bringing its total campaign for the year $55 million.
The focus of the control program will be to remove trees already killed by the infestation, officials with the Sustainable Resources Development Ministry said Monday.
Each of those trees contains enough pine beetles to infest an additional 10 trees, officials said.
Crews will also be culling older trees that are at risk of becoming infected and locating new areas where the beetle is becoming a problem.
The tiny mountain pine beetle (scientific name Dendroctonus ponderosae) is approximately the size of a grain of rice.
(Doug Linton/Natural Resources Canada)
Most of the work will be done in two areas on the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains, the ministry said.
Officials believe the cold winter has helped kill off many of the beetles, but they are still worried that new bugs will spread into Alberta this summer from British Columbia.
The beetles, which are as small as a grain of rice, attack mature pines, tunnelling into the trunks and spreading a pathogenic fungus. The beetles have already destroyed large parts of forests in British Columbia and are expected to wipe out nearly 80 per cent of the province's pines by 2013.
The Alberta government spent more than $134 million over the past two years fighting the mountain pine beetle in the northern Peace River district and along the eastern slopes of the Rockies.
Up to six million hectares of pine forest in Alberta are at risk of being affected, or about 15 per cent of the province's total forest, provincial officials said.
Share Tools
Latest British Columbia News Headlines
- Border traffic light after Washington bridge collapse
- Traffic is flowing smoothly at the Canada-U.S. border today, after a bridge collapsed along a major transportation route between Vancouver and Seattle Thursday night. more »
- Body found inside burning van in East Vancouver
- Police are investigating after a body was found inside a burning van in East Vancouver Saturday morning. more »
- McDonald's CEO chastised by 9-year-old B.C. girl
- A girl from Kelowna, B.C., is making international headlines for chastising the CEO of McDonald's during the corporation's annual shareholders meeting in Chicago on Thursday. more »
- UBC student took 'nose dive into water' after bridge collapse

- A UBC student says he's happy to be alive after the Skagit River Bridge collapsed beneath him on Thursday night. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- 3 more suspects arrested in slaying of U.K. soldier
- British police investigating the savage killing of an off-duty soldier in London have arrested three more suspects. more »
- Hockey Canada votes to ban bodychecking in peewee hockey
- Hockey Canada's board of directors voted to eliminate bodychecking from peewee-level hockey on Saturday in Charlottetown. more »
- Neil Macdonald: How serious is Obama about curbing the drone surge?
- In a key speech this week, the U.S. president set out a host of supposed new safeguards for America's controversial practice of remote-controlled rough justice. But as Neil Macdonald writes, the underlying rationale for drone use has not fundamentally changed. more »
- Ontario man lost in Australian mountains has survival skills
- The sister of an Ontario man who disappeared in Australia's Snowy Mountains nearly two weeks ago says she remains hopeful he will be found, partly because of his training as a Canadian Forces reservist. more »
- McDonald's CEO chastised by 9-year-old B.C. girl
- Dog snared on baited hooks near Vancouver's Grouse Grind trail
- UBC student took 'nose dive into water' after bridge collapse
- Motorists warned to avoid Washington bridge collapse area
- Vancouver man abandons Porsche on B.C. ferry
- VIDEO: Cruise ship chaos kicks off season in Vancouver
- Railway conduit planned to ship oilsands bitumen
- Body found inside burning van in East Vancouver
- Washington police blame bridge collapse on Alberta trucker

