- Also called:
- boreal forest
The taiga is the home of relatively few species of insects, but extensive and usually uniform areas of habitat periodically support high populations of species that do live there. The taiga lacks the elaborate complexes of invertebrate predators and parasites that serve as stabilizers of the insect populations in warmer regions. As a result, boreal insect populations occasionally increase rapidly and cause outbreaks. Some outbreaks can injure or kill trees across widespread areas of the taiga. Once an outbreak reaches a certain size, it can become self-sustaining, much like a forest fire; the effects of the spruce budworm and spruce beetle in North America are well-documented examples. Outbreaks can be triggered by unusual weather or physical injuries that stress trees and make them vulnerable to the insects; they can end for a variety of reasons, including production of defensive chemicals by the host plants or depletion of susceptible host plants.
Perhaps the insects most noticeable to humans in the taiga are mosquitoes, which belong to several species. Mosquitoes feed on and are fed upon by many of the birds of the taiga. Wetland areas of the boreal region, such as sites having poor drainage because of permafrost, provide extensive mosquito breeding sites. Where well-oxygenated flowing water is found, biting flies are abundant. Almost all food webs that support fish in the streams of the taiga are dependent on insects.
Conifers serve as hosts for a variety of wood-boring beetles, spruce beetles, bark beetles, and ips beetles (Ips species). These insects aid in wood decomposition and nutrient release. Some beetles have outer shells with specialized indentations specifically matched to the shape and size of the spores of wood-decomposing fungi. Fungal spores become securely lodged in these cuplike structures. As the beetles burrow into wood, they inoculate it with fungi.
A variety of lepidopterans (moths and butterflies) are adapted to feeding on the leaves of boreal trees. These include defoliators and leaf rollers.
Soil organisms
The species richness and total biomass of soil organisms are significantly lower in the taiga than they are at lower latitudes. Dominant soil organisms are protozoans, nematodes, rotifers, and tardigrades. These organisms live primarily in soil water film and soil pore water. The soil fauna of the taiga is distinctive because it generally lacks large invertebrates such as millipedes, isopods (springtails), and earthworms, especially in the middle and northern taiga. Larger soil invertebrate animals perform the function of biting off (shredding) pieces of leaf litter in forest soils and passing them through their guts. As a result of this activity, a thick layer of several years’ accumulation of only partially decomposed plant material is characteristic of soils in the taiga biome.
Fungi are the dominant organisms in the task of decomposition of litter in the taiga, but flushes of bacterial growth occur in response to triggering factors. The soil animals generally do not attack the forest litter directly but instead exert their influence by grazing on the fungi and bacteria. The rate of decomposition in taiga soils does not keep pace with the rate of production, causing the progressive accumulation of organic matter. At middle depths of the forest floor, small invertebrates, especially dipteran larvae, partially consume or skeletonize leaf litter before emerging as adults.