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  • In an annual winter tradition in Custer, South Dakota, hundreds of people participate in the Burning Beetle fest to raise awareness of the destructive impact of the mountain pine beetle.
  • Firefighters prepared and lit torches for residents, who marched to the pyre Saturday night for the 11th annual event.
  • The Black Hills have faced several outbreaks of the beetle since the 1890s.

In what’s become an annual winter tradition, hundreds of people carrying torches set fire to a giant wooden beetle effigy in Custer, South Dakota, to raise awareness of the destructive impact of the mountain pine beetle on forest land in the Black Hills.

Custer firefighters prepared and lighted the torches for residents to carry in a march to the pyre Saturday night in the 11th Burning Beetle fest, the Rapid City Journal reported.

People set the tall beetle effigy on fire amid drum beats and chants of “Burn, beetle, burn.” Firefighters kept watch, warning participants not to throw the torches, even as some people launched the burning sticks into pine trees piled at the base of the beetle.

SCIENTISTS NAME RARE BEETLE SPECIES AFTER FORMER CALIFORNIA GOV. JERRY BROWN

Fireworks dazzled overhead.

Mountain pine beetle

A dead mountain pine beetle sits in logger Dallis Hunter’s hand after he pulled it from the bark of a dead tree in Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest on Sept. 12, 2019, near Deer Lodge, Montana. In an annual winter tradition in Custer, South Dakota, hundreds of people participate in the Burning Beetle fest to raise awareness of the destructive impact of the mountain pine beetle on forest land in the Black Hills. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

The event, which includes a talent show and “bug crawl,” supports the local arts.

NEW SERBIAN BEETLE SPECIES NAMED AFTER TENNIS GREAT NOVAK DJOKOVIC

The U.S. Forest Service calls the mountain pine beetle “the most aggressive, persistent, and destructive bark beetle in the western United States and Canada.” 

The Black Hills have experienced several outbreaks of the beetle since the 1890s, the most recent being from 1996-2016, affecting 703 square miles, according to the South Dakota Department of Agriculture and Natural Resources.

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