4.2 Article

Habitat quality, not patch isolation, drives distribution and abundance of two light-demanding butterflies in fragmented coppice landscapes

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Article Zoology

Habitat Quality, Not Patch Size, Modulates Lizard Responses to Habitat Loss and Fragmentation in the Southwestern Amazon

Dionei J. Silva et al.

Summary: In this study, lizard responses to changes in landscape, habitat patch, and quality were examined in a deforestation frontier in southwestern Brazilian Amazonia. The results showed that species richness and abundance were not explained by the variables considered, but the composition of persisting species was determined by the structural complexity of the adjacent matrix.

JOURNAL OF HERPETOLOGY (2022)

Article Environmental Sciences

Breakpoints in butterfly decline in Central Europe over the last century

Jan Christian Habel et al.

Summary: Recent studies have shown a severe decline in insect diversity and abundance in Central Europe. In this study, the researchers analyzed the temporal trends of butterflies and Zygaenid moths in a specific region of Austria from 1920 to 2019. They found that habitat destruction and deterioration play major roles in biodiversity loss.

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT (2022)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

The direct drivers of recent global anthropogenic biodiversity loss

Pedro Jaureguiberry et al.

Summary: The study reveals that land/sea use change is the dominant direct driver of recent biodiversity loss worldwide, ranking first; exploitation of natural resources ranks second, and pollution ranks third. Climate change and invasive alien species are of significantly less importance.

SCIENCE ADVANCES (2022)

Article Forestry

Coppice loss and persistence in Germany

Johannes Kamp

Summary: Coppicing systems have almost disappeared in Germany, leading to the loss of biodiversity and cultural heritage. It is crucial to protect the remaining systems and develop measures to restore abandoned coppice, for sustainable forest and woodland management.

TREES FORESTS AND PEOPLE (2022)

Article Ornithology

Population trends of common breeding birds in Germany 1990-2018

Johannes Kamp et al.

Summary: Biodiversity monitoring is crucial for prioritizing research and evaluating conservation measures. The analysis of German bird monitoring data revealed significant declines in farmland birds, while wetland bird populations increased. Migratory birds showed more negative trends compared to resident species.

JOURNAL OF ORNITHOLOGY (2021)

Article Forestry

Dwindling coppice woods in Central Europe-Disappearing natural and cultural heritage

Tomas Slach et al.

Summary: Coppicing has declined in European countries, leading to the loss of natural and cultural-historical values. It is crucial to assess and protect the remaining coppice woodlands. Developing search tools to locate valuable remnants is essential for effective conservation efforts.

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT (2021)

Article Forestry

Recent forest area increase in Europe: expanding and regenerating forests differ in their regional patterns, drivers and productivity trends

Marina Palmero-Iniesta et al.

Summary: Forest area in Europe has increased by 1.4%, mainly due to forest expansion into former agricultural areas, particularly in Mediterranean and temperate regions. However, regeneration has dominated in boreal areas. Local drivers such as forest area and land cover diversity in 1992 have influenced the recent forest expansion.

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH (2021)

Article Forestry

The effect of coppicing on insect biodiversity. Small-scale mosaics of successional stages drive community turnover

Matthias Weiss et al.

Summary: Coppicing affects species richness, community composition, and life-history traits of butterflies, moths, and saproxylic beetles. Butterfly richness peaks in young coppice and is lowest in dense mid-aged stage, while moth richness is higher in late stages compared to early ones.

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT (2021)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Lost and found: 160 years of Lepidoptera observations in Wuppertal (Germany)

Tim Laussmann et al.

Summary: This study highlights the decline in butterfly and moth species richness in the Wuppertal region over the past 160 years, with a particular impact on specialized habitat species. Factors such as industrialization, urbanization, intensive agriculture, and forestry are seen as contributing to this trend.

JOURNAL OF INSECT CONSERVATION (2021)

Article Ecology

Abundance decline in the avifauna of the European Union reveals cross-continental similarities in biodiversity change

Fiona Burns et al.

Summary: While global assessments indicate biodiversity decline, local studies present a more balanced view of biodiversity change. The multifaceted nature of biodiversity and imperfect monitoring datasets may explain these findings. Using extensive data, significant biodiversity loss in the native avifauna of the European Union has been identified, particularly among bird species associated with agricultural land.

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION (2021)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Host specificity and species colouration mediate the regional decline of nocturnal moths in central European forests

Nicolas Roth et al.

Summary: The study found that nocturnal macro moths in forests in southern Germany exhibited different trends in species richness, abundance, and biomass, with a regional scale showing declines while a local coppiced oak forest showed increases. The decline in species numbers was speculated to be due to habitat loss and global warming, among other factors.

ECOGRAPHY (2021)

Article Forestry

Positive impact of traditional coppicing restoration on biodiversity of ground-dwelling spiders in a protected lowland forest

Pavla Vymazalova et al.

Summary: Traditional management practices in lowland forests of Central Europe have maintained habitat heterogeneity and biodiversity, but modern conservation methods unintentionally led to habitat homogenization and decline in diversity during the 20th century. Reintroducing active interventions, such as canopy thinning aimed at coppice restoration, has shown to increase species richness and abundance of spiders in lowland forest reserves. Combining various management intensities is crucial for biodiversity conservation, supporting functional groups across different habitats.

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT (2021)

Review Forestry

Coppice restoration and conservation: a European perspective

Peter Buckley

JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH (2020)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Is habitat fragmentation bad for biodiversity?

Lenore Fahrig et al.

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION (2019)

Article Entomology

Insect Declines in the Anthropocene

David L. Wagner

Annual Review of Entomology (2019)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Arthropod decline in grasslands and forests is associated with landscape-level drivers

Sebastian Seibold et al.

NATURE (2019)

Article Forestry

Long-term effects of wild ungulates on the structure, composition and succession of temperate forests

J. Ignacio Ramirez et al.

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT (2019)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Ungulates increase forest plant species richness to the benefit of non-forest specialists

Vincent Boulanger et al.

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY (2018)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Successful maintenance of Lepidoptera by government-funded management of coppiced forests

Matthias Dolek et al.

JOURNAL FOR NATURE CONSERVATION (2018)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Biodiversity along temperate forest succession

Torben Hilmers et al.

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY (2018)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Is habitat fragmentation good for biodiversity?

Robert J. Fletcher et al.

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION (2018)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Patch occupancy of grassland specialists: Habitat quality matters more than habitat connectivity

Dominik Poniatowski et al.

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION (2018)

Review Ecology

Ecological Responses to Habitat Fragmentation Per Se

Lenore Fahrig

ANNUAL REVIEW OF ECOLOGY, EVOLUTION, AND SYSTEMATICS, VOL 48 (2017)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Functional connectivity as an indicator for patch occupancy in grassland specialists

Dominik Poniatowski et al.

ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS (2016)

Article Ecology

Clear-cuts in production forests: From matrix to neo-habitat for butterflies

Torbjorn Blixt et al.

ACTA OECOLOGICA-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY (2015)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Habitat fragmentation and its lasting impact on Earth's ecosystems

Nick M. Haddad et al.

SCIENCE ADVANCES (2015)

Article Ecology

Reconstructing European forest management from 1600 to 2010

M. J. McGrath et al.

BIOGEOSCIENCES (2015)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Effects of coppicing on butterfly communities of woodlands

Thomas Fartmann et al.

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION (2013)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Non-random extinctions dominate plant community changes in abandoned coppices

Martin Kopecky et al.

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY (2013)

Article Ecology

A general and simple method for obtaining R2 from generalized linear mixed-effects models

Shinichi Nakagawa et al.

METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION (2013)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Effects of landscape and habitat quality on butterfly communities in pre-alpine calcareous grasslands

Benjamin Kraemer et al.

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION (2012)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Butterfly distribution and abundance is affected by variation in the Swedish forest-farmland landscape

Ake Berg et al.

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION (2011)

Review Ecology

The forgotten stage of forest succession: early-successional ecosystems on forest sites

Mark E. Swanson et al.

FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT (2011)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Evidence based conservation of butterflies

J. A. Thomas et al.

JOURNAL OF INSECT CONSERVATION (2011)

Article Ecology

Distance sampling and the challenge of monitoring butterfly populations

Nick J. B. Isaac et al.

METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION (2011)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Half a century of succession in a temperate oakwood: from species-rich community to mesic forest

Radim Hedl et al.

DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS (2010)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Estimating bird abundance: making methods work

Stephen T. Buckland et al.

BIRD CONSERVATION INTERNATIONAL (2008)

Review Ecology

Landscape modification and habitat fragmentation: a synthesis

Joern Fischer et al.

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY (2007)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Habitat use of the endangered butterfly Euphydryas maturna and forestry in Central Europe

A. Freese et al.

ANIMAL CONSERVATION (2006)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Biotope use and trends of European butterflies

C van Swaay et al.

JOURNAL OF INSECT CONSERVATION (2006)

Article Ecology

Modeling abundance effects in distance sampling

JA Royle et al.

ECOLOGY (2004)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Landscape effects on butterfly assemblages in an agricultural region

KO Bergman et al.

ECOGRAPHY (2004)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Natural disturbances in the European forests in the 19th and 20th centuries

MJ Schelhaas et al.

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY (2003)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Assessing the roles of patch quality, area, and isolation in predicting metapopulation dynamics

E Fleishman et al.

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY (2002)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Estimating deer abundance from line transect surveys of dung: sika deer in southern Scotland

FFC Marques et al.

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY (2001)