Oak trees delay leaf emergence to counter caterpillar outbreaks

Oak trees infested by caterpillars delay their leaf budding by three days the following spring, starving the insects and reducing damage. Researchers used satellite data to uncover this defense mechanism in German forests. The finding suggests trees actively adapt to herbivore attacks.

In northern Bavaria, Germany, oak trees hit hard by gypsy moth caterpillars in 2019 showed a striking response. The following spring, their buds opened three days later than those on unaffected trees. This timing mismatch left the hatching caterpillars without tender leaves to eat, causing many to die and halving leaf damage to 55 percent of the previous year's levels, according to Soumen Mallick at the University of Würzburg and his team. They analyzed Sentinel-1 radar satellite images covering 27,500 pixels—each roughly the size of one tree crown—in a 2400-square-kilometre area from 2017 to 2021, focusing on pedunculate oak (Quercus robur) and sessile oak (Quercus petraea) forests. The pedunculate oak is also known as the English oak. Mallick noted that this delay outperforms other oak defenses, such as tougher leaves or aromatic compounds that draw predators. He believes it reflects an evolutionary adaptation seen across multiple tree populations, not just individual stress from leaf loss. Experts praised the discovery but called for more evidence. James Cahill at the University of Alberta called it 'very plausible' yet correlational, urging data from additional outbreaks to confirm causality. James Blande at the University of Eastern Finland highlighted the need to probe underlying mechanisms. The study also sheds light on why forests sometimes green up later than climate models predict, emphasizing factors beyond warming temperatures.

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Swedish landscape with birch and oak trees releasing pollen, illustrating high pollen levels warning.
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Warning issued for high birch and oak pollen levels

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High levels of birch pollen are spreading northward in Sweden over the coming days. At the same time the risk of oak pollen is rising in the southern parts of the country, according to the Swedish Museum of Natural History.

A new study shows that deer keds, blood-feeding flies, scale back their visual capabilities after landing on a host and shedding their wings permanently. Researchers found that the insects reduce activity in key vision-related genes by about half. The change allows them to redirect energy toward feeding and reproduction.

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Researchers have discovered that distantly related butterflies and moths have used the same two genes, ivory and optix, for more than 120 million years to create similar warning colors on their wings. This finding suggests evolution can follow predictable genetic pathways rather than being entirely random. The study focused on species from South American rainforests.

A beekeeper in the Southeast U.S. has shared observations of small hive beetles in frame hives during spring 2026.

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A popular edible mushroom, the golden oyster, is spreading rapidly through U.S. forests, outcompeting native fungi and threatening biodiversity, according to University of Florida researchers. Sold widely in markets including Florida, the fungus has appeared in more than 25 states in about a decade. Michelle Jusino, a forest pathology expert, urges growers to handle it responsibly to prevent further ecological damage.

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