Birch Leafminers
Amber-marked birch leafminer (Profenusa thomsoni [Konow])
Late birch leaf edgeminer (Heterarthrus namoratus Fallen)
Also present is birch leafminer (Fenusa pumila Leach), not currently an issue in Alaska, so it is not discussed.
Host(s) in Alaska:
All native species of birch in Alaska (Betula spp.); Alaska paper birch, dwarf arctic birch, Kenai birch, paper birch, resin birch, western paper birch
Alder (Alnus spp.)
Habitat(s): Birch leaves (development) and in the duff/leaf litter (overwintering)
Current Status & Distribution in Alaska (2023 Update)
Birch leafminer continues to be a major damage agent in populated areas of Interior Alaska. Unfortunately, due to constraints with wildfires and smoke surrounding Fairbanks, we were unable to conduct the mid-August Aerial Detection Survey targeting birch leafminers, therefore no birch leafminer defoliation was recorded in this manner. This does not accurately reflect the true damage caused by birch leafminers in the Interior in 2023, which is evidenced by data collected during Interior Ground Detection Surveys (GDS). GDS confirmed moderate to high levels of damage in and around Fairbanks, Fox, North Pole, along the Richardson Highway, and along the Parks Highway to Nenana. Profenusa thomsoni and Heterarthrus nemoratus were observed throughout the Fairbanks North Star Borough, with especially high concentrations in urban and suburban centers. It was common to observe both species defoliating the same host at the same time. Damage from both species was recorded along Chena Hot Springs Road outside of Fairbanks and scattered stands along the Parks Highway to Nenana. There were a couple of records of Heterarthrus nemoratus on the Steese Highway near Circle that are separate from other known locations. Both sites are at popular parking areas for recreation activities. In Southcentral Alaska, birch leafminer activity remains at relatively low levels with some moderate activity around the Talkeetna Junction area. Six research grade observations of Heterarthrus nemoratus were recorded; four observations were made in Southcentral Alaska and two were made in Fairbanks. Five research grade observations of Profenusa thomsoni were recorded in Interior Alaska, four of which were in Fairbanks, Alaska and the remaining observation was recorded in Two Rivers, Alaska.
Historic Activity
In late May and early June, leaf mines on birch were observed earlier in the season than expected. Upon further investigation, mines were also found on alder. Larvae were extracted from the leaves and sent to LifeScanner for DNA-based identification. The leafminer was identified as the genus Eriocrania (Lepidoptera: Eriocraniidae) based on DNA analysis and comparisons in the Barcode of Life Data Systems and in consultation with a leafminer specialist. Notably, these specimens may represent an undescribed species.
Birch leafminers were observed during all ground-based survey efforts in 2020; however, it was undetectable during scan and sketch surveys in areas where it is known to occur.
Profenusa thomsoni and Heterarthrus nemoratus are the most commonly observed leafminers in birch in Southcentral and Interior. In Southcentral, leafminer damage was noted as low overall for both species during ground surveys. In the Interior, P. thomsoni damage was variable, ranging from trace to high levels of damage, while H. nemoratus damage was observed at trace to low levels. During ground surveys, approximately 2,800 acres of leafminer damage was mapped along the Richardson Highway south of Fairbanks and along the Parks Highway from around Talkeetna south to about Houston.
Invasive birch leafmining sawflies are believed to have entered eastern North America in the early 20th century, dispersed across Canada, and entered Alaska in the early 1990s. Birch leaf miner damage, specifically amber-marked birch leafminer (P. thomsoni), was first reported in Haines in 1991, but was not properly identified until it was detected in Anchorage in 1996. Following its introduction to Anchorage, sawfly populations increased dramatically, growing to outbreak levels throughout the Anchorage Bowl, and to a lesser degree the Mat-Su Valley and Kenai Peninsula. Damage caused by the amber-marked birch leafminer peaked in 2006 followed by a steady reduction in activity. During this period, the initially dominant amber-marked birch leafminer was displaced by late birch leaf edge miner, which reached peak severities affecting roughly 50% of leaves on infested birch in 2012.
In 2002, amber-marked birch leafminer was detected in Fairbanks where populations have intensified over the past 15 years. An initial absence of amber-marked birch leafminer populations between Fairbanks and Anchorage, and scattered occurrences along roadways and on pullouts, suggests an anthropogenic aided dispersal.
In response to rising leaf miner populations and their corresponding damage to birch leaves, biological control efforts were implemented from 2004 to 2008. During this period, more than 3,000 Lathrolestes thomsoni Konow (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae), a parasitoid linked to the collapse of leaf mining populations in Canada and the eastern U.S., were released in multiple locations, primarily in the Anchorage area. Following parasitoid release, percent of birch leaves mined dropped by 30-40%, but a similar decline in leaf miner activity observed in non-release sites made the impacts of Lathrolestes difficult to determine. However, since its release Lathrolestes has successfully become established in Alaska and is spreading out from release sites parasitizing invasive leaf miners in new locations. Additionally, while monitoring for the released parasitoid, two naturally occurring parasitoids, L. soperi Reshchikov and Aptesis segnis Provancher (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae), were discovered attacking birch leaf miners. While the exact impacts of parasitoids preying on leaf miner populations is not yet known, it is hoped they will help reduce pest populations in the future.
In road surveys in 2017 and 2018, we found that both P. thompsoni and H. nemoratus have expanded their ranges in Interior Alaska. In Fairbanks, P. thomsoni is still heavily impacting birch trees, and in 2018 was found for the first time in Delta Junction and nearby Clearwater State Recreational Area. Locations with H. nemoratus present in Fairbanks more than doubled from 2017 to 2018 (5 to 11 sites). H. nemoratus was recorded at several locations along a 30-mile stretch of the Parks Hwy north of Healy, and was found for the first time at the Delta Junction visitor center.
Biology, Symptoms, Impacts & Population Dynamics
Biology: Invasive birch leaf miners in Alaska are Palearctic sawflies (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae) a primitive species of stingless wasp. Amber-marked birch leaf miner overwinter in soil cocoons, pupate in summer, and emerge in late June early July. All adults are females and reproduce via parthenogenesis (i.e. no males, viable eggs are oviposited without the need for fertilization). Eggs are oviposited in slits cut into the midsection of birch leaves, and hatch within 12 days. Larvae feed between a leaf’s epidermal layers, “mining” the leaf, and develop through six stages (instars) over a period of 24 days. Only the first five instars are feeding; when the larval stages nears completion, larvae emerge from leaves, drop to the soil, and construct cocoons for overwintering.
Late birch leaf edge miner is very similar in life cycle and biology to amber-marked birch leafminer, but there are notable differences. Female late birch leaf edge miners oviposit eggs on outer edges of leaves, and this is where the mines occur (thus the name “edge miner”). Mines of late birch leaf edge miner take on a reddish hue distinguishing them from the yellowish-brown mines of amber-marked birch leafminer. Late birch leaf edge miner larvae make small slits in leaves to eject frass (insect feces) and shed larval skin from their mines; this behavior appears to be unique for this species among birch mining sawflies. Lastly, late birch leaf edge miner larvae pupate in the fall; pupae remain in leaves during leaf drop and overwinter in cocoons within their leaves on the ground. Both amber-marked birch leafminer and late birch leaf edge miner have a single generation per year (univoltine).
Symptoms: Amber-marked birch leafminer larval feeding becomes obvious in late July early August after a substantial portion of the leaf has been mined. Browning foliage can be mistaken for early senescence (i.e. transition to fall colors), but close examination of the leaf will prove otherwise: 1) Mined leaves will appear a sickly yellowish-brown compared to the vibrant gold naturally exhibited by birch in autumn, 2) leaf epidermal layers will have become detached due to larval feeding, and the leaf will take on the appearance of a flattened or collapsed blister filled with frass (insect feces), and 3) if the leaf is examined prior to larval emergence, the flattened yellowish larvae (6 mm in length) can be observed within affected leaves.
Both amber-marked birch leafminer and late birch leaf edge miner can be found in the same tree or even in the same leaf, but the mines caused by these species are distinguishable. Late birch leaf edgeminer mines are a reddish ring on the edge of a leaf, expanding inward, and contain little frass. In contrast, amber-marked birch leafminer mines begin in the center of the leaf, often near a major lateral vein, and expands outward, and contain notable dark frass. Regardless of the species, impacts to birch trees from the two species appear to be similar.
Impacts: Negative impacts from invasive birch leafmining sawflies in Alaska are primarily aesthetic. During outbreaks >90% of a tree’s leaves can be infested by sawflies. Mining disrupts a tree’s ability to conduct photosynthesis, but the majority of damage occurs later in the summer after most tree growth has occurred. Alaska’s long summer daylight hours in May, June, and July may provide enough photosynthetic potential for trees to flourish despite a reduced capacity for photosynthetic at the end of the season. To date, we have not recorded birch mortality due to these insects. We will continue to monitor birch mining sawfly populations and their birch hosts in the years ahead to determine possible long-term impacts from these invasive pests.
Population Dynamics: A major variable in reductions of amber-marked birch leafminer populations may be found in the sawfly’s egg laying behavior. Amber-marked birch leaf miner preferentially lay eggs on leaves that already have amber-marked birch leafminer eggs. Therefore, when amber-marked birch leafminer population levels are elevated, egg densities per leaf may become too high to sustain the hatched larvae. With insufficient resources available, many larvae never complete development. As the number of eggs per leaf approaches ten, mortality of larvae on the leaf approaches 100%.
The wasp Lathrolestes thomsoni (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) (no common name) is a known parasitoid of birch leafminers in North America. Parasitoids lay their eggs in or on host organisms. Upon hatching, parasitoids consume and kill their hosts. Lathrolestes thomsoni inject eggs into sawfly larvae, sawfly larvae complete development, build overwintering cocoons, and pupate as normal, but it is the parasitoid not the sawfly that emerges from the cocoon the following spring. Reductions in amber-marked birch leafminer populations in Alberta, Canada and the eastern U.S. have been associated with L. thomsoni, and this parasitoid has successfully become established in Alaska. The effects of parasitoids on birch leaf-mining sawfly populations in Alaska has yet to be determined.
Competition between the amber-marked birch leafminer and late birch leaf edge miner has the potential to negatively impact both populations. Research from outside Alaska suggests that there may be niche partitioning between amber-marked birch leafminer and late birch leaf edge miner, with amber-marked birch leafminer preferring leaves in the lower canopy and late birch leaf edge miner preferring the upper canopy. However, observations in Alaska have reported both species readily attack leaves throughout the canopy, and are often found in the same leaf.
The cause of the apparent collapse of amber-marked birch leafminer populations in many locations in Southcentral Alaska requires further investigation. Was it due to a detrimentally high density of eggs per leaf, the establishment of parasitoids, competition between two species, a combination or all of the above, or a factor not yet determined? Will a similar collapse in populations in the Interior and Southcentral be observed where population densities are still high? Continued monitoring of amber-marked birch leafminer and late birch leaf edge miner populations will help us to answer these questions.
Survey Method
Symptoms become apparent late-summer in 2018 following aerial detection surveys; therefore, damage extent and severity is monitored through ground-survey. Damage assessments of birch leafminer activity were based on percent of impacted leaves: Not Present 0%, Present 1-5%, Low 6-30%, Moderate 31-60%, High >60% (see distribution maps below).
Birch leafminer damage can be mapped during aerial surveys. Prior to 2018, invasive birch leaf-mining sawflies were thought to predominantly impact areas within major population centers and along roadways. Aerial surveys in Southcentral Alaska were conducted later in 2018, and damage was observed extending to remote forests.
Detection Maps (2019)
Birch leafminer activity detected in aerial and ground surveys in 2019.
Links to Resources & Publications
Digweed, S., R. McQueen, J. Spence, and D. Langor. 2003. Biological control of the ambermarked birch leafminer, Profenusa thomsoni (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae). Alberta.Information Report NOR-X-389, Northern Forestry Centre, Canadian Forest Service, Natural Resources Canada, Edmonton, Alberta.
Digweed, S. C., C. J. MacQuarrie, D. W. Langor, D. J. Williams, J. R. Spence, K. L. Nystrom, and L. Morneau. 2009. Current status of invasive alien birch-leafmining sawflies (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae) in Canada, with keys to species. The Canadian Entomologist 141:201-235.
Goulet, H. 1992. Insects and arachnids of Canada part 20. The genera and subgenera of the sawflies of Canada and Alaska. Hymenoptera: Symphyta.
MacQuarrie, C. J. K. 2008. Invasion history, population dynamics and biological control of Profenusa thomsoni (Konow) in Alaska. ProQuest.
Martin, J. L. 1960. The Bionomics of Profenusa thomsoni (Konow)(Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae) a leaf-mining sawfly on Betula.. The Canadian Entomologist 92:376-384.
Snyder, C., C. J. MacQuarrie, K. Zogas, J. J. Kruse, and J. Hard. 2007. Invasive species in the last frontier: distribution and phenology of birch leaf mining sawflies in Alaska. J. For. 105:113-155.
Soper, A. L., C. J. MacQuarrie, and R. Van Driesche. 2015. Introduction, establishment, and impact of Lathrolestes thomsoni (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) for biological control of the ambermarked birch leafminer, Profenusa thomsoni (Hymenoptera: Tenthredinidae), in Alaska. Biological Control 83:13-19.
Content prepared by: Stephen Burr PhD, Forest Entomologist, USDA Forest Service (now working in USFS Region 9). For more information, contact Southcentral Entomologist Jessie Moan (Mary.Moan@usda.gov) and Interior Entomologist Sydney Brannoch (Sydney.Brannoch@usda.gov).
Contact us Forest Health Protection Homepage