The Conservation of Saproxylic Beetles in Boreal Forest: Importance of Forest Management and Dead Wood

forest management and dead wood characteristics Doctoral dissertation ISSN 1652-6880, ISBN 91-576-7115-X Forest management has altered the age structure, tree species composition and dead wood availability of Swedish boreal forests. As a consequence, many saproxylic (wood living) insect species have...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Therese Johansson
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.214.81
http://diss-epsilon.slu.se:8080/archive/00001164/01/Kappa_TJ.pdf
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Summary:forest management and dead wood characteristics Doctoral dissertation ISSN 1652-6880, ISBN 91-576-7115-X Forest management has altered the age structure, tree species composition and dead wood availability of Swedish boreal forests. As a consequence, many saproxylic (wood living) insect species have decreased in abundance and many species are threatened. New conservation-oriented forestry uses management measures to favour saproxylic species in managed forests. In my thesis, I evaluated the importance of these measures for saproxylic beetles and possible improvements by using a large-scale field experiment at ten sites in northern Sweden. The substrate types used in the experiment included burned and shaded logs, logs inoculated with two species of wood-decaying fungi, untreated control logs, created snags and the tops of the snags. The experiment was performed in three stand types: clear-cuts, mature managed stands and old-growth stands. Additionally, I performed attraction experiments to examine the attraction of saproxylic beetles to sporocarps and mycelia-infected wood of wood-decaying fungi in landscapes with different proportions of