How to Fight Back Against Pine Beetles

Practical, proven ways to slow infestations and protect your trees before it spreads.

Why Quick Action Matters

Pine beetles spread fast. A single infested tree can release thousands of beetles that attack nearby healthy trees. The sooner you act, the more of your forest you save.

Solar Treatment

01

Cut and wrap infested wood in clear plastic to trap heat and kill larvae. Best used during hot summer months and for logs or firewood you plan to keep.

02

Preventative Spraying

Prevent beetles from attacking healthy trees by applying EPA-registered insecticides in the spring. Works best on high-value or high-risk trees.

Verbenone Packets

03

Verbenone disrupts beetle communication and helps protect your trees from attack. Use as part of an integrated pest management plan.

04

Chipping & Mastication

Chipping infested material into small pieces dries it out quickly, killing larvae and preventing beetles from emerging. A key step in large-scale cleanup and forest thinning.

Debarking

05

Removing bark destroys beetle habitat and exposes larvae to predators and the elements. Tools like draw knives or a Log Wizard make the job effective but labor intensive.

06

Forest Health

Healthy forests are more resistant. Reduce stress through proper spacing, thinning, and wildfire mitigation. Strong trees are the best long-term defense.

What Doesn’t Work

07

Waiting too long, treating dead trees, and relying on unproven methods can make infestations worse. Know what to avoid.

Treating to Late

Once trees turn red, beetles have already moved on.

Leaving dead trees

Dead trees are beetle factories. Remove them quickly.

DIY fixes & myths

Dead trees are beetle factories. Remove them quickly.

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