4.6 Article

Restoration of beech forest for saproxylic beetles-effects of habitat fragmentation and substrate density on species diversity and distribution

Journal

BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION
Volume 18, Issue 9, Pages 2387-2404

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10531-009-9595-5

Keywords

Beech snags; Coarse woody debris; Dispersal limitation; Red-listed species; Southern Sweden; Window traps

Funding

  1. Sustainable Management of Broadleaved Forest at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU)
  2. Regional Council of Skane

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The influence of spatial location and density of beech snags on species diversity and distribution patterns of saproxylic beetles was studied in a 2,400 ha forest landscape in southern Sweden. Complete snag surveys were combined with a beetle survey using small window traps directly attached to the beech snags. The density of beech snags a parts per thousand yen30 cm dbh varied between one and seven snags per ha within the study area, corresponding to 1.1-5.1 m(3)/ha. A total of 2,610 specimens of 180 saproxylic beetles species were trapped, of which 19 species were red-listed. Within the study area, the number of red-listed and formerly red-listed species was highest around traps in old-growth stands, intermediate in managed stands contiguous with old-growth and lowest in managed stands isolated from old-growth by a two km-wide zone without beech forest. Logistic regressions revealed negative relationships between distance to old-growth forest and occurrence of eleven species, among them six red-listed or formerly red-listed species. The number of non red-listed species was not correlated with isolation from old-growth forest. The number of red-listed species also increased with snag density within 200-300 m around the traps. Our results suggest that red-listed species generally have a lower dispersal capacity than other saproxylic beetles. We conclude that retention of dead wood close to existing populations is more beneficial for red-listed species than an even distribution of snags across the forest landscape.

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