Emergence of Coleoptera from deadwood in a managed broadleaved forest in central Europe
We studied Coleoptera emerging from deadwood in a broadleaved forest that has been managed with nature-oriented forestry since 1990 and in which an accumulation of 10m^sup 3^ deadwood/ha has been achieved. We sampled a total of 11m^sup 3^ of deadwood from oak and beech trees and yielded 32,477 indiv...
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Published in | Biodiversity and conservation Vol. 13; no. 10; pp. 1905 - 1924 |
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Main Authors | , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Dordrecht
Springer Nature B.V
01.09.2004
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | We studied Coleoptera emerging from deadwood in a broadleaved forest that has been managed with nature-oriented forestry since 1990 and in which an accumulation of 10m^sup 3^ deadwood/ha has been achieved. We sampled a total of 11m^sup 3^ of deadwood from oak and beech trees and yielded 32,477 individuals pertaining to 342 species. The number of species emerging from oak deadwood was significantly higher than that from beech. Significantly more species emerged from deadwood with medium size (15-21cm) diameter than from smaller (5-7cm) or larger (40-60cm) diameters. The stage of decay did not influence the number of species during the first 6 years of decomposition. Species richness strongly increased with the amount of deadwood sampled. Species-area regressions yielded z-values of 0.81 for oak and 0.87 for beech deadwood. The beetle assemblage was characterized by a low number of xylophagous species and a high number of mobile zoophagous species. However, two-thirds of the individuals sampled pertained to nine species of Scolytidae. This is why Shannon-Wiener diversity (H) and evenness-indices (E) greatly decreased with increasing number of scolytids. The species and individuals yielded from the sun-exposed deadwood outnumbered those from shaded areas. Namely the scolytid Taphrorychus bicolor reached remarkably high densities in the sun-exposed beech deadwood (>800 individuals/m^sup 2^). In contrast, oak deadwood never harboured such high numbers of scolytids. Felling of moribund trees had decreased the number of scolytids but it had also considerably reduced the number of rare and endangered species.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT] |
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Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-2 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-1 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 0960-3115 1572-9710 |
DOI: | 10.1023/B:BIOC.0000035873.56001.7d |