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Inonotus hispidus (shaggy bracket) I. hispidus has a wide range of hosts and attacks a large number of broadleaved trees in the northern hemisphere. In North America I. hispidus is...
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Intsia bijuga (Moluccan ironwood) I. bijuga is a heavy hardwood with the trade name merbau. Due to its physical and mechanical properties, high natural durability and attractive...
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Intsia palembanica (ironwood) Merbau is a heavy hardwood, the trade of which has been especially important in Peninsular Malaysia. During the late 1980s, its export by Indonesia...
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Ips amitinus (small spruce bark beetle) I. amitinus is a member of the complex of bark beetles on Norway spruce, Picea abies, and this usually also includes Ips typographus and Pityogenes...
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Ips calligraphus (six-spined ips) Ips calligraphus is mainly a secondary pest of conifer forests and feeds mostly on Pinus species (Wood and Bright, 1991). It occurs throughout...
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Ips cembrae (large larch bark beetle) This species is a secondary pest in native European Larix plantations, breeding in logs, wind-blown stems and dying trees. In Germany, timber from...
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Ips confusus (pinyon ips) Epidemic populations of I. confusus often occur throughout the range of their hosts, especially in southwestern USA (Furniss and Carolin, 1977)....
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Ips duplicatus (double-spined bark beetle) In Slovakia, I. duplicatus is considered to be invasive and a quarantine pest (Novotny and Zubrik, 2000). The spread of the beetle in this region...
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Ips grandicollis (five-spined bark beetle) In 2000, losses due to Ips grandicollis and two other sympatric Ips species (Ips avulsus and Ips calligraphus) were estimated to be $13.4 million...
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Ips hauseri (Kyrgyz mountain engraver) I. hauseri is the most harmful species of Picea schrenkiana. During outbreaks I. hauseri also invades healthy young trees. The beetles are usually...
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