Responses of small mammals to clear-cutting in temperate and boreal forests of Europe: a meta-analysis and review

We analyzed the responses of small mammals to clear-cutting in temperate and boreal forests in Europe. We conducted a meta-analysis of published research on most often studied small mammal species (the striped field mouse, the yellow-necked mouse, the wood mouse, the field vole, the common vole, the...

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Main Authors: Bogdziewicz, Michał, Zwolak, Rafał
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Springer 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10593/7642
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spelling ftmickiewiczuni:oai:repozytorium.amu.edu.pl:10593/7642 2023-07-30T04:03:00+02:00 Responses of small mammals to clear-cutting in temperate and boreal forests of Europe: a meta-analysis and review Bogdziewicz, Michał Zwolak, Rafał 2013 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10593/7642 en eng Springer http://hdl.handle.net/10593/7642 European forests Forest management Logging Rodents Shrews Artykuł 2013 ftmickiewiczuni 2023-07-17T18:28:12Z We analyzed the responses of small mammals to clear-cutting in temperate and boreal forests in Europe. We conducted a meta-analysis of published research on most often studied small mammal species (the striped field mouse, the yellow-necked mouse, the wood mouse, the field vole, the common vole, the bank vole, the Eurasian harvest mouse, the common shrew and the Eurasian pygmy shrew), comparing their abundance on clear-cuts and in unharvested stands. For four other species (the gray-sided vole, the Siberian flying squirrel, the Eurasian red squirrel and the hazel dormouse), we provide a qualitative review of their responses to forest harvest. Results of the meta-analysis suggest that common species of small mammals usually increase in abundance after clear-cutting or are unaffected by this disturbance. As an exception, the yellow-necked mouse declines after clear-cutting in boreal but not in temperate forest. The qualitative review suggests that the responses of more specialized (e.g., arboreal) species to forest harvest are more varied than the responses of generalist species included in the meta-analysis. For some species of small mammals (e.g., the Siberian flying squirrel), habitat loss resulting from forest harvest is a major threat. MNiSW Grant NN304391537 Article in Journal/Newspaper Common vole AMUR - Adam Mickiewicz University Repository, Poznan
institution Open Polar
collection AMUR - Adam Mickiewicz University Repository, Poznan
op_collection_id ftmickiewiczuni
language English
topic European forests
Forest management
Logging
Rodents
Shrews
spellingShingle European forests
Forest management
Logging
Rodents
Shrews
Bogdziewicz, Michał
Zwolak, Rafał
Responses of small mammals to clear-cutting in temperate and boreal forests of Europe: a meta-analysis and review
topic_facet European forests
Forest management
Logging
Rodents
Shrews
description We analyzed the responses of small mammals to clear-cutting in temperate and boreal forests in Europe. We conducted a meta-analysis of published research on most often studied small mammal species (the striped field mouse, the yellow-necked mouse, the wood mouse, the field vole, the common vole, the bank vole, the Eurasian harvest mouse, the common shrew and the Eurasian pygmy shrew), comparing their abundance on clear-cuts and in unharvested stands. For four other species (the gray-sided vole, the Siberian flying squirrel, the Eurasian red squirrel and the hazel dormouse), we provide a qualitative review of their responses to forest harvest. Results of the meta-analysis suggest that common species of small mammals usually increase in abundance after clear-cutting or are unaffected by this disturbance. As an exception, the yellow-necked mouse declines after clear-cutting in boreal but not in temperate forest. The qualitative review suggests that the responses of more specialized (e.g., arboreal) species to forest harvest are more varied than the responses of generalist species included in the meta-analysis. For some species of small mammals (e.g., the Siberian flying squirrel), habitat loss resulting from forest harvest is a major threat. MNiSW Grant NN304391537
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Bogdziewicz, Michał
Zwolak, Rafał
author_facet Bogdziewicz, Michał
Zwolak, Rafał
author_sort Bogdziewicz, Michał
title Responses of small mammals to clear-cutting in temperate and boreal forests of Europe: a meta-analysis and review
title_short Responses of small mammals to clear-cutting in temperate and boreal forests of Europe: a meta-analysis and review
title_full Responses of small mammals to clear-cutting in temperate and boreal forests of Europe: a meta-analysis and review
title_fullStr Responses of small mammals to clear-cutting in temperate and boreal forests of Europe: a meta-analysis and review
title_full_unstemmed Responses of small mammals to clear-cutting in temperate and boreal forests of Europe: a meta-analysis and review
title_sort responses of small mammals to clear-cutting in temperate and boreal forests of europe: a meta-analysis and review
publisher Springer
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10593/7642
genre Common vole
genre_facet Common vole
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10593/7642
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