4.0 Article Proceedings Paper

Structure and conservation of lepidopteran communities in managed forests of northeastern North America: a review

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CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST
卷 140, 期 4, 页码 475-494

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CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.4039/n07-LS06

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We review the existing literature on patterns of moth (Lepidoptera) and community composition ill northeastern Nearctic forest ecosystems across hierarchical scales ranging front individual trees to entire managed ecoregions. Moths are species-rich in northeastern forests of North America. with the most diverse families being, Noctuidae and Geometridae. Individual trees and forest stands, however, are often dominated by few species. Climate, stand age. disturbance regime, and landscape heterogeneity are significant predictors of abundance of dominant species. Most other moth species ill the regional pool are patchily dominant and appear to occur regularly at very low abundance. Moth communities respond predictably to forest-management practices, and the outcomes of postmanagement response are largely drivelly changes in the plant community. Significant reductions in moth species richness and changes in Community composition are correlated With Clear-cut harvesting, whereas selective logging appears to cause more moderate changes in moth community Structure. Broad-scale effects of forest fragmentation on moth communities in unglaciated regions are best described by species replacement rather than species loss: moth species richness decreases slightly across a gradient of fragment sizes'. but shifts in moth community composition are more important, especially ill the relative importance of herbaceous-plant-feeding species ill large and small fragments. Species that appear to be most sensitive to timber management or habitat loss ire dietary specialists as larvae, dispersal-limited as adults. or dependent on commercially valuable free species such as oaks, Quercus L. (Fagaceae). Restored forest stands tend to converge in terms of lepidopteran species dominance and diversity among Stands. Suggesting that the long-term consequences of timber management or habitat loss include a significant reduction beta-diversity. Finally, future research oil forest Lepidoptera should include all emphasis Oil Understanding the role of urban,ill woodland habitat ill retaining, viable and diverse moth communities and how the spatial pattern of, timber harvest affects the relative magnitude of alpha- and beta-diversity components within a given ecoregion.

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