What kind of insect/animal

   / What kind of insect/animal #1  

Gem99ultra

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What kind of animal or insect strips a Sweetgum tree like this?

Stripped Sweetgum-a.jpg
[/ATTACH]Stripped Sweetgum -b.jpg

Any info would be appreciated.
 
   / What kind of insect/animal #2  
Dang...at first thought it might be woodpecker.
 
   / What kind of insect/animal #3  
Idk but watch your back:eek:
 
   / What kind of insect/animal #4  
Dang...at first thought it might be woodpecker.

If it was around here that would be the answer, the large pileated woodpeckers,
they will strip and shred a tree in a hurry going after insects.
 
   / What kind of insect/animal #5  
If it was around here that would be the answer, the large pileated woodpeckers,
they will strip and shred a tree in a hurry going after insects.

We have a pair of Pileated Woodpeckers on our place so maybe he has some. I often hear them since they have a very distinctive call but seeing them can be difficult because they are very skittish.

I have seen trees like that before but not on our place.

Maybe it is just a giant bear....

:shocked::shocked::shocked::laughing::laughing::laughing:

Later,
Dan
 
   / What kind of insect/animal #6  
That first picture looks a little doctored up, but the tree looks dead, and I would agree that insects and woodpeckers are at work.
 
   / What kind of insect/animal #7  
If it was around here that would be the answer, the large pileated woodpeckers,
they will strip and shred a tree in a hurry going after insects.

I agree. They are avian chainsaws. I've watched them strip and tear into a dead softwood. :cool:
 
   / What kind of insect/animal #8  
Just looks like a dead tree that has been rotting away for years. Why it died might be because of woodpeckers, but then trees just die sometimes without any really good reason.
 
   / What kind of insect/animal #9  
Got to be woodpeckers for sure. As for what caused it to die, could be anything from a lightening strike to wood borers to drought.
 
   / What kind of insect/animal #10  
Lordy - even the worst of any pine bark beetle infestations never look that bad. The pine dies and the beetles move on, long before it looks anything like that. We have a brand of woodpecker - sapsucker - that's a miniature version of the pileated woodpecker. Raise havoc with my fruit trees.
 
 
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