The common pine sawfly, Diprion pini, is a sawfly species in the family Diprionidae. It is a serious pest of economic forestry, capable of defoliating large areas of pine forest. It occurs throughout Europe and Russia.
Diprion pini is an insect with complete metamorphosis, changing from a caterpillar larva via a pupal stage to a winged adult. Last-stage larvae can be up to 25mm long; the head is brown, while the body is light green with black spots. The adult (imago) is brown and is around 10mm long. The larvae feed on pine needles.[1]
Eggs are laid in rows in springtime, on pine needles from the previous year. Young caterpillars start feeding on the old needles near where they hatched, leaving the vascular bundles uneaten. Older caterpillars feed more widely, moving to other branches and eating whole needles except for the leaf sheath; late in the season they also consume the current year's needles. The caterpillars live in groups of some 60 to 100 individuals. The pupa is attached to a pine twig.
The species is widely distributed across Europe and Russia, and is present in Algeria, Siberia, and Turkey.[2] Its host plants are species of pine including Pinus banksiana (jack pine), P. cembra (arolla pine), P. contorta (lodgepole pine), P. mugo (mountain pine), P. nigra (black pine), P. pinaster (maritime pine), P. radiata (radiata pine), P. strobus (eastern white pine), P. sylvestris (Scots pine), P. uncinata (mountain pine), and P. wallichiana (blue pine).[2]
Outbreaks of D. pini are eruptive, rising rapidly to large infestations after long latent periods; this makes monitoring difficult.[2] Scots pines are not generally killed by a single defoliation, but weakened trees may suffer increased attack by bark beetles, buprestid beetles, and pine weevils, which can kill trees, as can repeated defoliation. During high rates of defoliation, the growth rate of pines decreases significantly.[2] Climate change appears to be allowing the pest to damage forests increasingly far north, such as in Scandinavia. Since it feeds until late in the autumn, affected trees are weakened and often die in the subsequent winter.[3] The presence of D. pini can be monitored with pheromone traps.[4] Serious infestations are treated by aerial spraying with insecticides such as diflubenzuron or pyrethroids.[2] Biological control with the parasitoid of sawfly pupae Dahlbominus fuscipennis has been used effectively.[2] The planting of mixtures of species of tree has been proposed to reduce pest damage.[2] [5]