Hollow beech trees identified as keystone structures for saproxylic beetles by analyses of functional and phylogenetic diversity

The general importance of dead wood in European beech forests for species requiring high amounts of decayed wood of large diameter has recently been demonstrated using a functional approach. However, the effect of veteran trees, particularly of living hollow trees with mould, on functional diversity...

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Published inAnimal conservation Vol. 17; no. 2; pp. 154 - 162
Main Authors Müller, J., Jarzabek-Müller, A., Bussler, H., Gossner, M. M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.04.2014
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
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Summary:The general importance of dead wood in European beech forests for species requiring high amounts of decayed wood of large diameter has recently been demonstrated using a functional approach. However, the effect of veteran trees, particularly of living hollow trees with mould, on functional diversity, is less understood. These trees are known to be a habitat for a few endangered and specialized arthropods and epiphytes. Their ecological role as a complex habitat has been assumed, but not yet formally tested. We compared the richness and functional and phylogenetic diversity of saproxylic beetle assemblages of vital beech trees, habitat trees (i.e. trees with partial bark loss, broken crowns or sporocarps) and hollow trees with mould. As expected, the richness of red‐listed species increased from vital trees to habitat trees to hollow trees. When we controlled for species richness using null models, both functional and phylogenetic diversity were higher for hollow trees than for habitat trees, which can be explained by the habitat heterogeneity hypothesis. Single‐trait analyses revealed that hollow trees promoted species requiring late decay stages, large diameters and shady habitats. This suggests that in beech forests, hollow trees not only promote the few specialists of hollow trees, but also play a superior role for species under pressure by current logging practices and as a keystone structure with high habitat diversity at one tree. We therefore urge forest managers and conservationists to monitor particularly the easy‐to‐identify hollow trees and the conspicuous species living in such trees, as useful umbrellas for a high‐diversity dead‐wood habitat.
Bibliography:istex:3E494A22166CEDB8C44A8276DEE74C1D14ADF3CB
ArticleID:ACV12075
ark:/67375/WNG-153HWL4M-T
Appendix S1. Trait characterization. Appendix S2. List of all species. Appendix S3. Significance values of a global test and the post-hoc tests.
German Federal Agency for Nature Conservation
ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 23
ISSN:1367-9430
1469-1795
DOI:10.1111/acv.12075