Polygamous
There are three or four females for every male balsam fir bark beetle, according to the University of British Columbia website, meaning the insect is polygamous in nature.
Egg Stage
The female bark beetle lays its tiny eggs just under the surface of a tree's outer bark; usually it chooses a balsam fir tree but sometimes a lodgepole pine or an Engelmann spruce.
Effects
The eggs of the bark beetle hatch and the larvae will then bore holes that form a complex maze under the bark, adjacent to the area where the female laid her eggs. They increase these "galleries" in size as they mature.
Time Frame
In time, the larvae enter the pupae stage, turning into adult bark beetles. These beetles emerge during any time of the calendar year but most commonly in the latter portion of spring or in late summer.
Lifespan
In most cases, the A Cut Above Forestry website states, the balsam fir bark beetle has a two-year life cycle, staying the first winter under the bark in its larval stage and then the second as an adult. It then will begin the mating process anew and die shortly after.