Drvna industrija, Vol. 70 No. 2, 2019.
Review article
https://doi.org/10.5552/drvind.2019.1818
Insect Species Damaging Industrial Wood in Western Black Sea Region of Turkey
Mesut Yalçın
; Duzce University, Forest Faculty, Department of Forest Engineering, Duzce, Turkey
Çağlar Akçay
; Duzce University, Forest Faculty, Department of Forest Engineering, Duzce, Turkey
Cihat Taşçıoğlu
; Duzce University, Forest Faculty, Department of Forest Engineering, Duzce, Turkey
Beşir Yüksel
; Duzce University, Forest Faculty, Department of Forest Engineering, Duzce, Turkey
Abstract
Insect species collected in log depots in Western Black Sea Region of Turkey were identified. The study covered two years, 2015 and 2016, in 21 log depots in seven provinces (Duzce, Bolu, Zonguldak, Bartin, Karabuk, Kastamonu and Sinop). The study area was divided into three sub regions and each sub region was analyzed for insect species, their prevalence and intensities. Overall, four orders, 22 families, 74 genera and 57 species were described in log depots of the study area. Sub region 1 (Düzce-Bolu) showed the highest diversity in terms of insect species and sub region 2 (Zonguldak-Bartin) had the lowest diversity. Dorcus parallelipipedus Linnaeus, 1758 (Coleoptera: Lucanidae) and Rhagium inquisitor Linnaeus, 1758 (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) were found in all provinces studied. Based on wood species analysis, Scots pine wood had the highest diversity in insect species, followed by fi r, oak and beech. The study also described some important wood-destroying insect species from the families Anobiidae, Buprestidae and Cerambycidae. Buprestis dalmatina (Mannerheim, 1837) (Coleoptera: Buprestidae), Leptura aurulenta (Fabricius, 1792) (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) and Stictoleptura scutellata (Fabricius, 1781) (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae), all wood-destroying insect species, were identified for the first time in the Western Black Sea Region of Turkey.
Keywords
log depots; Turkey; Western Black Sea Region; wood-destroying insects; wood species
Hrčak ID:
221598
URI
Publication date:
28.6.2019.
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