Experimental evidence on biodiversity impacts of variable retention forestry, prescribed burning, and deadwood manipulation in Fennoscandia

Intensive forest management has been applied in most Fennoscandian forests for a period of almost one felling rotation. This paradigm has produced even-aged and even-structured forests of different successional stages that cover about 90% of forest land. At the same time, wildfires have been nearly...

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Main Authors: Koivula, Matti, Vanha-Majamaa, Ilkka
Other Authors: orcid:0000-0001-6415-4904, 4100110710, Luonnonvarakeskus
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Springer
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jukuri.luke.fi/handle/10024/546358
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author Koivula, Matti
Vanha-Majamaa, Ilkka
author2 orcid:0000-0001-6415-4904
4100110710
Luonnonvarakeskus
author_facet Koivula, Matti
Vanha-Majamaa, Ilkka
author_sort Koivula, Matti
collection Natural Resources Institute Finland: Jukuri
description Intensive forest management has been applied in most Fennoscandian forests for a period of almost one felling rotation. This paradigm has produced even-aged and even-structured forests of different successional stages that cover about 90% of forest land. At the same time, wildfires have been nearly eliminated in most of the Fennoscandian nature. Consequently, hundreds of species are red-listed because of forest management. To support these species, forest management requires improvements. Variable retention forestry and habitat restoration have been suggested to mitigate negative effects of forest management on biodiversity, and these have been practiced to some extent during the past few decades. Here, we review experimental results on the effects of variable retention and two restoration measures (prescribed burning and artificial addition of coarse woody debris) on different species groups in Fennoscandia. Our key findings are as follows: (i) Many species respond positively to felling within a few years, apparently due to released and often ephemeral resources, such as fresh residue and stumps. Species associated with shady conditions are negatively impacted, but any retention supports many of these, and their species composition remains almost unaffected with 50–70% retention of the initial tree volume. (ii) These effects remain detectable for at least 10–30 years or, according to some studies, nearly 100 years, e.g., in polypore fungi. (iii) Initial effects of prescribed burning on most species groups (apart from pyrophiles) are negative, but within 10–15 years post-fire sites begin to support many rare and threatened deadwood-dependent species. Epiphytic lichens, however, remain negatively affected. (iv) Artificial addition of deadwood (mostly high stumps) supports a wide spectrum of deadwood-dependent species, but the species composition differs from that of naturally died trees. (v) Moisture and micro-habitat variation are crucial for forest species at harvested sites, at least in forests dominated by ...
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spelling ftluke:oai:jukuri.luke.fi:10024/546358 2025-01-16T21:50:39+00:00 Experimental evidence on biodiversity impacts of variable retention forestry, prescribed burning, and deadwood manipulation in Fennoscandia Koivula, Matti Vanha-Majamaa, Ilkka orcid:0000-0001-6415-4904 4100110710 Luonnonvarakeskus 22 p. true https://jukuri.luke.fi/handle/10024/546358 en eng Springer Ecological processes 10.1186/s13717-019-0209-1 2192-1709 1 9 11 https://jukuri.luke.fi/handle/10024/546358 URN:NBN:fi-fe2020100878366 CC BY 4.0 beetles forest management invertebrates Polypore resilience Resistance Restoration Saproxylic Soil fauna Understory vegetation publication fi=A2 Katsausartikkeli tieteellisessä aikakauslehdessä|sv=A2 Översiktsartikel i en vetenskaplig tidskrift|en=A2 Review article, Literature review, Systematic review| fi=Publisher's version|sv=Publisher's version|en=Publisher's version| ftluke 2023-09-12T20:27:41Z Intensive forest management has been applied in most Fennoscandian forests for a period of almost one felling rotation. This paradigm has produced even-aged and even-structured forests of different successional stages that cover about 90% of forest land. At the same time, wildfires have been nearly eliminated in most of the Fennoscandian nature. Consequently, hundreds of species are red-listed because of forest management. To support these species, forest management requires improvements. Variable retention forestry and habitat restoration have been suggested to mitigate negative effects of forest management on biodiversity, and these have been practiced to some extent during the past few decades. Here, we review experimental results on the effects of variable retention and two restoration measures (prescribed burning and artificial addition of coarse woody debris) on different species groups in Fennoscandia. Our key findings are as follows: (i) Many species respond positively to felling within a few years, apparently due to released and often ephemeral resources, such as fresh residue and stumps. Species associated with shady conditions are negatively impacted, but any retention supports many of these, and their species composition remains almost unaffected with 50–70% retention of the initial tree volume. (ii) These effects remain detectable for at least 10–30 years or, according to some studies, nearly 100 years, e.g., in polypore fungi. (iii) Initial effects of prescribed burning on most species groups (apart from pyrophiles) are negative, but within 10–15 years post-fire sites begin to support many rare and threatened deadwood-dependent species. Epiphytic lichens, however, remain negatively affected. (iv) Artificial addition of deadwood (mostly high stumps) supports a wide spectrum of deadwood-dependent species, but the species composition differs from that of naturally died trees. (v) Moisture and micro-habitat variation are crucial for forest species at harvested sites, at least in forests dominated by ... Text Fennoscandia Fennoscandian Natural Resources Institute Finland: Jukuri Deadwood ENVELOPE(-117.453,-117.453,56.733,56.733)
spellingShingle beetles
forest management
invertebrates
Polypore
resilience
Resistance
Restoration
Saproxylic
Soil fauna
Understory vegetation
Koivula, Matti
Vanha-Majamaa, Ilkka
Experimental evidence on biodiversity impacts of variable retention forestry, prescribed burning, and deadwood manipulation in Fennoscandia
title Experimental evidence on biodiversity impacts of variable retention forestry, prescribed burning, and deadwood manipulation in Fennoscandia
title_full Experimental evidence on biodiversity impacts of variable retention forestry, prescribed burning, and deadwood manipulation in Fennoscandia
title_fullStr Experimental evidence on biodiversity impacts of variable retention forestry, prescribed burning, and deadwood manipulation in Fennoscandia
title_full_unstemmed Experimental evidence on biodiversity impacts of variable retention forestry, prescribed burning, and deadwood manipulation in Fennoscandia
title_short Experimental evidence on biodiversity impacts of variable retention forestry, prescribed burning, and deadwood manipulation in Fennoscandia
title_sort experimental evidence on biodiversity impacts of variable retention forestry, prescribed burning, and deadwood manipulation in fennoscandia
topic beetles
forest management
invertebrates
Polypore
resilience
Resistance
Restoration
Saproxylic
Soil fauna
Understory vegetation
topic_facet beetles
forest management
invertebrates
Polypore
resilience
Resistance
Restoration
Saproxylic
Soil fauna
Understory vegetation
url https://jukuri.luke.fi/handle/10024/546358