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  3. Can multi‐taxa diversity in European beech forest landscapes be increased by combining different management systems?
 

Can multi‐taxa diversity in European beech forest landscapes be increased by combining different management systems?

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.143985
Date of Publication
July 2020
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Pflanzen...

Author
Schall, Peter
Heinrichs, Steffi
Ammer, Christian
Ayasse, Manfred
Boch, Steffen
Institut für Pflanzenwissenschaften (IPS)
Buscot, François
Fischer, Markus
Institut für Pflanzenwissenschaften (IPS)
Goldmann, Kezia
Overmann, Jörg
Schulze, Ernst‐Detlef
Sikorski, Johannes
Weisser, Wolfgang W.
Wubet, Tesfaye
Gossner, Martin M.
Subject(s)

500 - Science::580 - ...

Series
Journal of Applied Ecology
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0021-8901
Publisher
Wiley
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1111/1365-2664.13635
Uncontrolled Keywords

complementarity

even‐aged forests

forest specialists

gamma‐diversity

landscape composition...

resampling

uneven‐aged forests

unmanaged forests

Description
1. Forest management greatly influences biodiversity across spatial scales. At the landscape scale, combining management systems that create different stand properties might promote biodiversity due to complementary species assemblages. In European beech forests, nature conservation and policy advocate a mixture of unmanaged (UNM) forests and uneven-aged (UEA) forests managed at fine spatial grain at the expense of traditionally managed even-aged shelterwood forests (EA). Evidence that such a landscape composition enhances forest biodiversity is still missing.
2. We studied the biodiversity (species richness 0D, Shannon diversity 1D, Simpson diversity 2D) of 14 taxonomic groups from bacteria to vertebrates in ‘virtual’ beech forest landscapes composed of varying shares of EA, UEA and UNM and investigated how γ‐diversity responds to landscape composition. Groups were sampled in the largest contiguous beech forest in Germany, where EA and UEA management date back nearly two centuries, while management was abandoned 20–70 years ago (UNM). We used a novel resampling approach that created all compositional combinations of management systems.
3. Pure EA landscapes preserved a maximum of 97.5% γ‐multidiversity (0D, 1D) across all taxa. Pure and mixed UEA/UNM landscapes reduced γ‐multidiversity by up to 12.8% (1D). This effect was consistent for forest specialists (1D: −15.3%). We found only weak complementarity among management systems.
4. Landscape composition significantly affected γ‐diversity of 6–9 individual taxa, depending on the weighting of species frequencies with strongest responses for spiders, beetles, vascular plants and birds. Most showed maximum diversity in pure EA landscapes. Birds benefited from UNM in EA‐dominated landscapes. Deadwood fungi showed highest diversity in UNM.
5. Synthesis and applications. Our study shows that combining fine‐grained forest management and management abandonment at the landscape scale will reduce, rather than enhance, regional forest biodiversity. We found an even‐aged shelterwood management system alone operating at intermediate spatial scales and providing stands with high environmental heterogeneity was able to support regional biodiversity. However, some taxa require certain shares of uneven‐aged and unmanaged forests, emphasizing their general importance. We encourage using the here presented resampling approach to verify our results in forest landscapes of different composition and configuration across the temperate zone.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/35880
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2020_JApplEcol_57_1363.pdfAdobe PDF1.53 MBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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