4.2 Article

Aspen-inhabiting Aphyllophoroid fungi in a managed forest landscape in Estonia

Journal

SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH
Volume 26, Issue 3, Pages 212-220

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS AS
DOI: 10.1080/02827581.2011.558850

Keywords

Deadwood; even-aged management; hemiboreal; natural regeneration; polypore; Populus tremula; threatened species

Categories

Funding

  1. Estonian Science Foundation [7402]
  2. State Forest Management Centre
  3. Estonian Ministry of Education and Science [SF0180012s09]
  4. European Union (Centre of Excellence FIBIR)

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In northern Europe, the biologically rich European aspen (Populus tremula) tends to disappear both from intensively managed and strictly protected forests, thus representing a biodiversity conservation challenge. This study describes the distribution of Aphyllophoroid fungi inhabiting aspen in a hemiboreal mixed-forest landscape where clear-cutting was usually followed by natural regeneration. In a 4-km(2) area in Estonia, 181 individual forest stands and cut areas were surveyed. Sixty-one percent of the 2831 live aspen trees found were concentrated in 11% of the area. Thirty-six polypore species were recorded on aspen, with old stands and naturally created deadwood hosting most species. Among the records of 14 pre-defined aspen-specific basidiomycetes, Phellinus tremulae comprised about 95%. Six species (Ceriporiopsis aneirina, Clavicorona pyxidata, Funalia trogii, Phellinus populicola, Rigidoporus corticola, Steccherinum pseudozilingianum) were infrequent to rare, but widely distributed, inhabiting various stand-age classes, and mostly occurring outside key habitats''. All the seven species absent are of conservation concern and frequent in Estonian old-growth forests. Thus, rotational management with natural aspen regeneration only provided habitat for some aspen-specific species. For sustaining all species, such landscapes should probably be complemented with stands managed using modified thinning and partial harvesting techniques in aspen-containing mixed stands.

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