用户名: 密码: 验证码:
The significance of deadwood for total bryophyte, lichen, and vascular plant diversity in an old-growth spruce forest
详细信息    查看全文
  • 作者:Sebastian Dittrich ; Mascha Jacob ; Claudia Bade ; Christoph Leuschner…
  • 关键词:Forest conservation ; Species richness ; Deadwood decay ; Competition ; Facilitation ; Norway spruce
  • 刊名:Plant Ecology
  • 出版年:2014
  • 出版时间:October 2014
  • 年:2014
  • 卷:215
  • 期:10
  • 页码:1123-1137
  • 全文大小:904 KB
  • 参考文献:1. Aakala T (2011) Temporal variability of deadwood volume and quality in boreal old-growth forests. Silva Fenn 45:969-81 CrossRef
    2. Andersson LI, Hytteborn H (1991) Bryophytes and decaying wood—a comparison between managed and natural forest. Holarct Ecol 14:121-30
    3. Arseneault J, Fenton NJ, Bergeron Y (2012) Effects of variable canopy retention harvest on epixylic bryophytes in boreal black spruce-feathermoss forests. Can J For Res 42:1467-476 CrossRef
    4. Ba?e R, Svoboda M, Pouska V, Janda P, ?ervenka J (2012) Natural regeneration in Central-European spruce forests: which logs are suitable for seedling recruitment? For Ecol Manag 266:254-62 CrossRef
    5. Bader P, Jansson S, Jonsson BG (1995) Wood-inhabiting fungi and substratum decline in selectively logged boreal spruce forests. Biol Conserv 72:355-62 CrossRef
    6. Barkman JJ (1958) Phytosociology and ecology of cryptogamic epiphytes, including a taxonomic survey and description of their vegetation units in Europe. Van Gorcum, Assen
    7. Blanchette RA (1991) Delignification by wood-decay fungi. Annu Rev Phytopathol 29:381-98 CrossRef
    8. B?hlmann N, Meissner R, Bernsdorf S, B?hme F, Russow R, Wegener U (2005) Studies of atmospheric nitrogen deposition in a mire of the German Nationalpark Hochharz Mountains using two different methods. Water Air Soil Pollut 168:17-2 CrossRef
    9. Bunnell FL, Spribille T, Houde I, Goward T, Bj?rk C (2008) Lichens on down wood in logged and unlogged forest stands. Can J For Res 38:1033-041 CrossRef
    10. Caruso A, Rudolphi J (2009) Influence of substrate age and quality on species diversity of lichens and bryophytes on stumps. Bryologist 112:520-31 CrossRef
    11. Clarke KR (1993) Non-parametric multivariate analysis of changes in community structure. Aust J Ecol 18:117-43 CrossRef
    12. Conti ME, Cecchetti G (2001) Biomonitoring: lichens as bioindicators of air pollution assessment—a review. Environ Pollut 114:471-92 CrossRef
    13. Cornelissen JHC, Karssemeijer GJ (1987) Bryophyte vegetation on spruce stumps in the Haute-Fagnes, Belgium, with special reference to wood decay. Phytocoenologia 15:485-04 CrossRef
    14. Crites S, Dale MRT (1998) Diversity and abundance of bryophytes, lichens, and fungi in relation to woody substrate and successional stage in aspen mixedwood boreal forests. Can J Bot 76:641-51
    15. Daniels FJA (1993) Succession in lichen vegetation on Scots pine stumps. Phytocoenologia 23:619-23 CrossRef
    16. Dier?en K (2001) Distribution, ecological amplitude and phytosociological characterization of European bryophytes. Bryophyt Bibl 56:1-89
    17. Dittrich S, Hauck M, Jacob M, Rommerskirchen A, Leuschner C (2013a) Response of ground vegetation and epiphyte diversity to natural age dynamics in a Central European mountain spruce forest. J Veg Sci 24:675-87 CrossRef
    18. Dittrich S, Hauck M, Schweigatz D, D?rfler I, Hühne R, Bade C, Jacob M, Leuschner C (2013b) Separating forest continuity from tree age effects on plant diversity in the ground and epiphyte vegetation of a Central European mountain spruce forest. Flora 208:238-46 CrossRef
    19. Dufrêne M, Legendre P (1997) Species assemblages and indicator species: the need for a flexible asymmetrical approach. Ecol Monogr 67:345-66
    20. Ehnstr?m B (2001) Leaving dead wood for insects in boreal forests—suggestions for the future. Scand J For Res Suppl 3:91-8 CrossRef
    21. Falinski J (1978) Uprooted trees, their distribution and influence in the primeval forest biotope. Vegetatio 38:175-83 CrossRef
    22. Fenton NJ, Beland C, De Blois S, Bergeron Y (2007) / Sphagnum establishment and expansion in black spruce ( / Picea mariana) boreal forests. Can J Bot 85:43-0 CrossRef
    23. Fridman J, Walheim M (2000) Amount, structure, and dynamics of dead wood of managed forestland in Sweden. For Ecol Manag 131:23-6 CrossRef
    24. García LV (2004) Escaping the Bonferroni iron claw in ecological studies. Oikos 105:657-63 CrossRef
    25. Gibb H, Pettersson RB, Hj?ltén J, Hilszczański J, Ball JP, Johansson T, Atlegrim O, Danell K (2006) Conservation-oriented forestry and early successional saproxylic beetles: responses of functional groups to manipulated dead wood substrates. Biol Conserv 129:437-50 CrossRef
    26. Gl?sser R (1994) Das Klima des Harzes. Kova?, Hamburg
    27. Greger O (1992) Erfassung von Relikten des autochthonen Fichtenvorkommens im Hochharz. Aus dem Walde 44:1-19
    28. Greven HC (1992) Changes in the moss flora of The Netherlands. Biol Conserv 59:133-37 CrossRef
    29. Grove SJ (2001) Extent and composition of dead wood in Australian lowland tropical rainforest with different management histories. For Ecol Manag 154:35-3 CrossRef
    30. Hale CM, Pastor J, Rusterholz KA (1999) Comparison of structural and compositional characteristics in old-growth and mature, managed hardwood forests in Minnesota, U.S.A. Can J For Res 29:1479-489 CrossRef
    31. Hammel KE, Kapich AN, Jensen KA, Ryan ZC (2002) Reactive oxygen species as agents of wood decay by fungi. Enzyme Microbial Technol 30:445-53 CrossRef
    32. Hauck M (1996) Die Flechten Niedersachsens. Bestand, ?kologie, Gef?hrdung und Naturschutz. Naturschutz Landschaftspfl Niedersachsen 36:1-08
    33. Hauck M (2005) Epiphytic lichen diversity on dead and dying conifers under different levels of atmospheric pollution. Environ Pollut 135:111-19 CrossRef
    34. Hauck M (2011) Site factors controlling epiphytic lichen abundance in northern coniferous forests. Flora 206:81-0 CrossRef
    35. Hauck M, Zimmermann J, Jacob M, Dulamsuren Ch, Bade C, Ahrends B, Leuschner C (2012) Rapid recovery of stem increment in Norway spruce at reduced SO2 levels in the Harz Mountains, Germany. Environ Pollut 164:132-41 CrossRef
    36. Hauck M, de Bruyn U, Leuschner C (2013a) Dramatic diversity losses in epiphytic lichens in temperate broad-leaved forests during the last 150?years. Biol Conserv 157:136-45 CrossRef
    37. Hauck M, Jacob M, Dittrich S, Bade C, Leuschner C (2013b) Natürliche Walddynamik und ihr Wert für Biodiversit?t und ?kosystemfunktionen: Ergebnisse einer Fallstudie aus dem Harz. Forstarchiv 84:75-0
    38. Holeksa J (2001) Coarse woody debris in Carpathian subalpine spruce forest. Forstwiss Centralbl 120:256-70 CrossRef
    39. Holeksa J, Zielonka T, ?ywiec M (2008) Modeling the decay of coarse woody debris in subalpine Norway spruce forest of the West Carpathians, Poland. Can J For Res 38:415-28 CrossRef
    40. Humphrey JW, Davey S, Peace AJ, Ferris R, Harding K (2002) Lichens and bryophyte communities of planted and semi-natural forests in Britain: the influence of site type, stand structure and deadwood. Biol Conserv 107:165-80 CrossRef
    41. J?ger EJ (2011) Rothmaler. Exkursionsflora von Deutschland. Gef??pflanzen: Grundband, 20th edn. Springer Spektrum, Heidelberg
    42. Jonsson BG (2000) Availability of coarse woody debris in a boreal old-growth / Picea abies forest. J Veg Sci 11:51-6 CrossRef
    43. Jonsson BG, Kruys N, Ranius T (2005) Ecology of species living on dead wood—lessons for dead wood management. Silva Fenn 39:289-09
    44. Kathke S, Bruelheide H (2010) Interaction of gap age and microsite type for the regeneration of / Picea abies. For Ecol Manag 259:1597-605 CrossRef
    45. Kirby KJ, Reid CM, Thomas RC, Goldsmith FB (1998) Preliminary estimates of fallen deadwood and standing dead trees in managed and unmanaged forests in Britain. J Appl Ecol 35:148-55 CrossRef
    46. Koperski M (2011) Rote Liste und Gesamtartenliste der Moose in Niedersachsen und Bremen. 3. Fassung, Stand 2011. Informationsdienst Naturschutz Niedersachsen 31:131-05
    47. Koperski M, Sauer M, Braun W, Gradstein SR (2000) Referenzliste der Moose Deutschlands. Schriftenreihe Vegetationskunde 34:1-19
    48. Kruys N, Fries C, Jonsson BG, L?mas T, St?hl G (1999) Wood-inhabiting cryptogams on dead Norway spruce ( / Picea abies) trees in managed Swedish boreal forests. Can J For Res 29:178-86 CrossRef
    49. Lesica P, McCune B, Cooper SV, Hong WS (1991) Differences in lichen and bryophyte communities between old-growth and managed second-growth forests in the Swan Valley, Montana. Can J Bot 69:1745-755 CrossRef
    50. Nagel J, Albert M, Schmidt M (2002) Das waldbauliche Prognose-und Entscheidungsmodell BWINPro 6.1. Forst und Holz 57:486-92
    51. Nascimbene J, Thor G, Nimis PL (2013) Effects of forest management on epiphytic lichens in temperate deciduous forests of Europe—a review. For Ecol Manag 298:27-8 CrossRef
    52. ódor P, van Hees AFM (2004) Preference of dead wood inhabiting bryophytes for decay stage, log size and habitat types in Hungarian beech forests. J Bryol 26:79-5 CrossRef
    53. ódor P, Heilmann-Clausen J, Christensen M, Aude E, van Dort KW, Piltaver A, Siller I, Veerkamp MT, Walleyn R, Standovár T, van Hees AFM, Kosec J, Mato?ec N, Kraigher H, Grebenc T (2006) Diversity of dead wood inhabiting fungi and bryophytes in semi-natural beech forests in Europe. Biol Conserv 131:58-1 CrossRef
    54. Pouska V, Lep? J, Svoboda M, Lep?ová A (2011) How do log characteristics influence the occurrence of wood fungi in a mountain spruce forest? Fung Ecol 4:201-09 CrossRef
    55. Schubert R, Hilbig W, Klotz S (2001) Bestimmungsbuch der Pflanzengesellschaften Deutschlands, 2nd edn. Springer Spektrum, Heidelberg
    56. Sippola AL, Siitonen J, Kallio R (1998) Amount and quality of coarse woody debris in natural and managed forests near the timberline in Finnish Lapland. Scand J For Res 13:204-14 CrossRef
    57. S?derstr?m L (1988) Sequence of bryophytes and lichens in relation to substrate variables of decaying coniferous wood in Northern Sweden. Nord J Bot 8:89-7 CrossRef
    58. Spribille T, Thor G, Bunnell FL, Goward T, Bj?rk C (2008) Lichens on dead wood: species-substrate relationships in the epiphytic lichen floras of the Pacific Northwest and Fennoscandia. Ecography 31:741-50 CrossRef
    59. St?cker G (1998) Typisierung von Zerfallsstadien des stehenden Totholzes in Alters- und Zerfallsphasen naturnaher und urwaldartiger Fichten- und Kiefernw?lder. Beitr Forstwirtsch Landschafts?kol 32:1-
    60. St?cker G (2001) Growth dynamics of Norway spruce ( / Picea abies (L.) Karst.) in natural spruce forest ecosystems of the National Park Hochharz. 1. Regeneration phase and initial phase. Forstwiss Centralbl 120:187-02 CrossRef
    61. St?cker G (2002) Growth dynamics of Norway spruce ( / Picea abies (L.) Karst.) in natural spruce forest ecosystems of the National Park Hochharz. 2. Climax, ageing and decay phases. Forstwiss Centralbl 121:109-27 CrossRef
    62. Stokland JN, Siitonen J, Jonsson BG (2012) Biodiversity in dead wood. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge CrossRef
    63. Svensson M, Dahlberg A, Ranius T, Thor G (2013) Occurrence patterns of lichens on stumps in young managed forests. PLoS One 8:e62825 CrossRef
    64. Svensson M, Dahlberg A, Ranius T, Thor G (2014) Dead branches on living trees constitute a large part of the dead wood in managed boreal forests, but are not important for wood-dependant lichens. J Veg Sci 25:819-28 CrossRef
    65. Swanson ME, Franklin JF, Beschta RL, Crisafulli CM, Della Sala DA, Hutto RL, Lindenmayer DB, Swanson FJ (2011) The forgotten stage of forest succession: early-successional ecosystems on forest sites. Front Ecol Environ 9:117-25 CrossRef
    66. van Herk CM (1999) Mapping ammonia pollution with epiphytic lichens in the Netherlands. Lichenologist 31:9-0 CrossRef
    67. von Kortzfleisch A (2008) Die Kunst der schwarzen Gesellen, K?hlerei im Harz. Papierflieger, Clausthal-Zellerfeld
    68. Winter S, Flade M, Schumacher H, Kerstan E, M?ller G (2005) The importance of near-natural stand structures for the biocoenosis of lowland beech forests. For Snow Landsc Res 79:127-44
    69. Wirth V, Hauck M, Schultz M (2013) Die Flechten Deutschlands. Ulmer, Stuttgart
    70. Wisskirchen R, Haeupler H (1998) Standardliste der Farn- und Blütenpflanzen Deutschlands. Ulmer, Stuttgart
    71. Zielonka T, Niklasson M (2001) Dynamics of dead wood and regeneration pattern in natural spruce forest in the Tatra Forest, Poland. Ecol Bull 49:159-63
    72. Zielonka T, Pi?tek G (2004) The herb and dwarf shrubs colonization of decaying logs in subalpine forest in the Polish Tatra Mountains. Plant Ecol 172:63-2 CrossRef
  • 作者单位:Sebastian Dittrich (1)
    Mascha Jacob (1)
    Claudia Bade (1)
    Christoph Leuschner (1)
    Markus Hauck (1)

    1. Plant Ecology, Albrecht von Haller Institute for Plant Sciences, University of G?ttingen, Untere Karspüle 2, 37073, G?ttingen, Germany
  • ISSN:1573-5052
文摘
Modern silviculture has led to a reduction in deadwood, especially that of large diameter, and thus the loss of an important habitat niche in most European forests. We analyzed the significance of deadwood for the total species diversity in three plant groups (bryophytes, lichens, and vascular plants) in one of Central Europe’s few remnants of unmanaged old-growth forest. The site is a montane forest of Picea abies on Mt. Brocken, Harz Mountains, Germany, which has not been managed for at least several centuries, undergoes natural forest dynamics, and thus harbors large amounts of standing and downed deadwood. Epiphyte vegetation of live trees and the ground vegetation were studied for comparison. We did not find any obligate deadwood species. Nevertheless, 84?% (70 species) of the total species were found on standing or downed deadwood. One-third of these species, or 28?% of the total species in the forest, were only sampled on deadwood, whereas the remaining species were also found on live trees and/or the ground. Bryophytes were the largest group of species on deadwood (47?% of the deadwood-inhabiting species), followed by lichens (37?%) and vascular plants (16?%). Large-diameter deadwood in an advanced stage of decay harbored more species than smaller fragments in the early stages of decay. Despite the lack of obligate deadwood colonizers, deadwood apparently plays a key role for forest plant diversity, mainly by providing an environment with low competition and thus facilitating the establishment of species.

© 2004-2018 中国地质图书馆版权所有 京ICP备05064691号 京公网安备11010802017129号

地址:北京市海淀区学院路29号 邮编:100083

电话:办公室:(+86 10)66554848;文献借阅、咨询服务、科技查新:66554700