Can a species confined to primeval-like forests reach fragments of habitat in a managed landscape?

The Swedish government has taken initiatives to intensify the conservational work at landscape scale. That is, to analyse different needs for biodiversity, and together with different actors, for example the forestry sector, find ways for long time conservation of the biodiversity. Old growth, moist...

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Published in:Proceedings of the 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology
Main Authors: Bader, Pekka, Eriksson, Anna-Maria
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Open Science Centre, University of Jyväskylä 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.17011/conference/eccb2018/107906
http://urn.fi/
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spelling ftjyvaeskylaenun:oai:jyx.jyu.fi:123456789/62198 2023-05-15T18:31:07+02:00 Can a species confined to primeval-like forests reach fragments of habitat in a managed landscape? Bader, Pekka Eriksson, Anna-Maria 2018 text/html fulltext https://doi.org/10.17011/conference/eccb2018/107906 http://urn.fi/ eng eng Open Science Centre, University of Jyväskylä https://peerageofscience.org/conference/eccb2018/107906/ ECCB2018: 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology. 12th - 15th of June 2018, Jyväskylä, Finland Bader, P. and Eriksson, A. M. (2018). Can a species confined to primeval-like forests reach fragments of habitat in a managed landscape?. 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology. doi:10.17011/conference/eccb2018/107906 doi:10.17011/conference/eccb2018/107906 http://urn.fi/ CC BY 4.0 © the Authors, 2018 openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ CC-BY Article http://purl.org/eprint/type/ConferenceItem conference paper not in proceedings publishedVersion conferenceObject 2018 ftjyvaeskylaenun https://doi.org/10.17011/conference/eccb2018/107906 2021-09-23T20:28:39Z The Swedish government has taken initiatives to intensify the conservational work at landscape scale. That is, to analyse different needs for biodiversity, and together with different actors, for example the forestry sector, find ways for long time conservation of the biodiversity. Old growth, moist spruce forests constitute an important habitat for a substantial part of the species belonging to the taiga. One of them is the saproxylic beetle Pytho kolwensis, in Sweden considered as endangered. The larvae feed on cambium on newly fallen spruces for about five years. After 10-15 years the log can no longer provide food for the larvae and the adult beetles have to lay eggs in other spruce logs. The logs are typically large trunks of old spruces (> 200 yr.), a structure no longer produced in the managed forest landscape. This type of old forest is today only found as fragments and the species is known from only about 20 localities in Sweden. Although the habitat today is rare, it is comparably easily restored. Given enough time a spruce stand of average productivity will eventually become suitable for P. kolwensis, as long as no large-scale disturbance takes place. The question is; will the adult beetles find these fragments of suitable forest stands in a landscape dominated by young managed stands, i.e. is the dispersal ability of the species sufficient? In order to reach an answer to the question, 54 spruce logs were felled in 2010 at different distances, at most about one kilometre, from a forest stand with a strong population of P. kolwensis. Preferably large old spruces were chosen, but in some cases, no such were found. Hence felled trees were 72-326 yr. old with a breast height diameter of 23-55 cm. Some of the cut trees were in stands in close vicinity to the source stand. Other were situated in stands surrounded by open areas without trees, habitat that possibly is avoided by flying adult beetles. The study is performed in the central part of Sweden and is run by the County administration of Västernorrlands län. The inventory of felled trees will continue until all logs have passed the suitable stage as habitat for kolwensis-larvae. On ECCB 2018 the first results are presented, showing that so far some of the nearest situated logs have been colonized. The presentation also embraces what type of logs that have been used by the species. peerReviewed Article in Journal/Newspaper taiga JYX - Jyväskylä University Digital Archive Proceedings of the 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology
institution Open Polar
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language English
description The Swedish government has taken initiatives to intensify the conservational work at landscape scale. That is, to analyse different needs for biodiversity, and together with different actors, for example the forestry sector, find ways for long time conservation of the biodiversity. Old growth, moist spruce forests constitute an important habitat for a substantial part of the species belonging to the taiga. One of them is the saproxylic beetle Pytho kolwensis, in Sweden considered as endangered. The larvae feed on cambium on newly fallen spruces for about five years. After 10-15 years the log can no longer provide food for the larvae and the adult beetles have to lay eggs in other spruce logs. The logs are typically large trunks of old spruces (> 200 yr.), a structure no longer produced in the managed forest landscape. This type of old forest is today only found as fragments and the species is known from only about 20 localities in Sweden. Although the habitat today is rare, it is comparably easily restored. Given enough time a spruce stand of average productivity will eventually become suitable for P. kolwensis, as long as no large-scale disturbance takes place. The question is; will the adult beetles find these fragments of suitable forest stands in a landscape dominated by young managed stands, i.e. is the dispersal ability of the species sufficient? In order to reach an answer to the question, 54 spruce logs were felled in 2010 at different distances, at most about one kilometre, from a forest stand with a strong population of P. kolwensis. Preferably large old spruces were chosen, but in some cases, no such were found. Hence felled trees were 72-326 yr. old with a breast height diameter of 23-55 cm. Some of the cut trees were in stands in close vicinity to the source stand. Other were situated in stands surrounded by open areas without trees, habitat that possibly is avoided by flying adult beetles. The study is performed in the central part of Sweden and is run by the County administration of Västernorrlands län. The inventory of felled trees will continue until all logs have passed the suitable stage as habitat for kolwensis-larvae. On ECCB 2018 the first results are presented, showing that so far some of the nearest situated logs have been colonized. The presentation also embraces what type of logs that have been used by the species. peerReviewed
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Bader, Pekka
Eriksson, Anna-Maria
spellingShingle Bader, Pekka
Eriksson, Anna-Maria
Can a species confined to primeval-like forests reach fragments of habitat in a managed landscape?
author_facet Bader, Pekka
Eriksson, Anna-Maria
author_sort Bader, Pekka
title Can a species confined to primeval-like forests reach fragments of habitat in a managed landscape?
title_short Can a species confined to primeval-like forests reach fragments of habitat in a managed landscape?
title_full Can a species confined to primeval-like forests reach fragments of habitat in a managed landscape?
title_fullStr Can a species confined to primeval-like forests reach fragments of habitat in a managed landscape?
title_full_unstemmed Can a species confined to primeval-like forests reach fragments of habitat in a managed landscape?
title_sort can a species confined to primeval-like forests reach fragments of habitat in a managed landscape?
publisher Open Science Centre, University of Jyväskylä
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.17011/conference/eccb2018/107906
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genre taiga
genre_facet taiga
op_relation https://peerageofscience.org/conference/eccb2018/107906/
ECCB2018: 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology. 12th - 15th of June 2018, Jyväskylä, Finland
Bader, P. and Eriksson, A. M. (2018). Can a species confined to primeval-like forests reach fragments of habitat in a managed landscape?. 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology. doi:10.17011/conference/eccb2018/107906
doi:10.17011/conference/eccb2018/107906
http://urn.fi/
op_rights CC BY 4.0
© the Authors, 2018
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op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.17011/conference/eccb2018/107906
container_title Proceedings of the 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology
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