Saproxylic beetles in two types of fine woody debris of Norway spruce

Fine Woody Debris (FWD) has been considered as the promising source of forest fuel in Fennoscandia. Main sources are logging residues which formerly were retained on clearcuts. Recent studies indicate that many saproxylic (wood-living) organisms use this wood, and the harvest may decrease their bree...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Manak, Vitezslav
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: SLU/Dept. of Ecology 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/12023/
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author Manak, Vitezslav
author_facet Manak, Vitezslav
author_sort Manak, Vitezslav
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences: Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Fine Woody Debris (FWD) has been considered as the promising source of forest fuel in Fennoscandia. Main sources are logging residues which formerly were retained on clearcuts. Recent studies indicate that many saproxylic (wood-living) organisms use this wood, and the harvest may decrease their breeding substrate. However, dead branches of thin diameters constitute a common substrate in closed canopy forest stand. If the fauna of dead branches is similar to that of clearcuts, the negative effects of forest fuel harvesting should be considered rather small. The aim of this study was to compare saproxylic beetle fauna between (1) spruce twigs retained on one-year-old clearcuts and (2) dying bottom branches attached to living trees. I examined the effect of twig type, twig diameter, sun exposure and height on densities of species and individuals as well as on species composition of saproxylic beetles. Twig type was the most explanatory variable and higher densities of species and individuals were found in retained twigs on clearcuts. There were species specifically associated with retained twigs as well as with dying bottom branches. In addition to twig type there was a significant effect of height and sun exposure as those beetles being abundant in dying bottom branches were more common either in open conditions or in branches high above the ground. The results indicate that FWD is not a homogenous substrate for saproxylic beetles. If the pattern is similar for other tree species, the forest fuel harvesting may have negative effect on saproxylic beetles utilizing the dead wood of fine diameters.
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genre Fennoscandia
genre_facet Fennoscandia
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
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spelling ftsluppsalast:oai:stud.epsilon.slu.se:12023 2025-04-13T14:18:34+00:00 Saproxylic beetles in two types of fine woody debris of Norway spruce Manak, Vitezslav 2007 https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/12023/ eng eng SLU/Dept. of Ecology https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/12023/ boreal forest saproxylic Coleoptera conservation forest-fuel harvesting Fine Woody Debris logging residues Norway spruce L3 2007 ftsluppsalast 2025-03-17T04:37:44Z Fine Woody Debris (FWD) has been considered as the promising source of forest fuel in Fennoscandia. Main sources are logging residues which formerly were retained on clearcuts. Recent studies indicate that many saproxylic (wood-living) organisms use this wood, and the harvest may decrease their breeding substrate. However, dead branches of thin diameters constitute a common substrate in closed canopy forest stand. If the fauna of dead branches is similar to that of clearcuts, the negative effects of forest fuel harvesting should be considered rather small. The aim of this study was to compare saproxylic beetle fauna between (1) spruce twigs retained on one-year-old clearcuts and (2) dying bottom branches attached to living trees. I examined the effect of twig type, twig diameter, sun exposure and height on densities of species and individuals as well as on species composition of saproxylic beetles. Twig type was the most explanatory variable and higher densities of species and individuals were found in retained twigs on clearcuts. There were species specifically associated with retained twigs as well as with dying bottom branches. In addition to twig type there was a significant effect of height and sun exposure as those beetles being abundant in dying bottom branches were more common either in open conditions or in branches high above the ground. The results indicate that FWD is not a homogenous substrate for saproxylic beetles. If the pattern is similar for other tree species, the forest fuel harvesting may have negative effect on saproxylic beetles utilizing the dead wood of fine diameters. Other/Unknown Material Fennoscandia Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences: Epsilon Archive for Student Projects Norway
spellingShingle boreal forest
saproxylic
Coleoptera
conservation
forest-fuel harvesting
Fine Woody Debris
logging residues
Norway spruce
Manak, Vitezslav
Saproxylic beetles in two types of fine woody debris of Norway spruce
title Saproxylic beetles in two types of fine woody debris of Norway spruce
title_full Saproxylic beetles in two types of fine woody debris of Norway spruce
title_fullStr Saproxylic beetles in two types of fine woody debris of Norway spruce
title_full_unstemmed Saproxylic beetles in two types of fine woody debris of Norway spruce
title_short Saproxylic beetles in two types of fine woody debris of Norway spruce
title_sort saproxylic beetles in two types of fine woody debris of norway spruce
topic boreal forest
saproxylic
Coleoptera
conservation
forest-fuel harvesting
Fine Woody Debris
logging residues
Norway spruce
topic_facet boreal forest
saproxylic
Coleoptera
conservation
forest-fuel harvesting
Fine Woody Debris
logging residues
Norway spruce
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/12023/