Effects of natural forest dynamics on vascular plant, bryophyte, and lichen diversity in primeval Fagus sylvatica forests and comparison with production forests

被引:31
|
作者
Kaufmann, Stefan [1 ]
Hauck, Markus [1 ]
Leuschner, Christoph [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Goettingen, Albrecht von Haller Inst Plant Sci, Plant Ecol & Ecosyst Res, Gottingen, Germany
关键词
bryophytes; Fagus sylvatica; forest development stages; forest management; habitat heterogeneity; lichens; primeval forests; vascular plants; HERB LAYER VEGETATION; BEECH FOREST; OLD-GROWTH; SPECIES-DIVERSITY; EPIPHYTIC LICHENS; DEAD WOOD; HERBACEOUS-LAYER; SWEDISH BEECH; TREE AGE; MANAGEMENT;
D O I
10.1111/1365-2745.12981
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Stand structure, mean tree age, deadwood amount and microclimate all change markedly in the course of natural forest dynamics. The last remaining primeval forests of the temperate forest biome are valuable study objects to investigate the effects of forest dynamics and management on forest structure and function as well as phytodiversity, which is not sufficiently understood. Three pairs of Fagus sylvatica primeval and production forests in eastern Slovakia were selected for studying the effects of natural forest development stages on vascular plant, bryophyte, and lichen species richness and composition. We further compared the diversity patterns in the initial, optimal and terminal stages of forest development with those of nearby production forests. The plot-level species richness of epiphytic bryophytes and lichens increased from the initial to the terminal stage, but only lichens exhibited a significantly higher cumulative species richness ( diversity) in the later (optimal and terminal) stages. No increase in species richness from the initial to the terminal stage was found for deadwood-inhabiting epiphytes and the ground-layer vascular plants. Canonical correspondence analyses identified characteristic bryophyte and lichen species for the different development stages, while the bulk of vascular ground layer species occurred across all stages with no stage preference. Stem diameter was an even more important driver of epiphyte diversity and species composition than the development stage. All stages of the primeval forests (including the initial) were more species-rich in epiphytes and, when investigating larger plot numbers, also in vascular plants than the production forests. Synthesis. In primeval forests of European beech, plant species richness did not differ significantly between the consecutive forest development stages, while species composition did. This is attributable to the small-scale mosaic structure of the forest, rapid gap closure by beech, and the continuity of deadwood across the stages, which reduces spatio-temporal differences in microhabitat availability in the forest. Bryophytes and lichens are species-richer, and vascular plants at least similarly rich, in the primeval as compared to the production forests, if the study area is sufficiently large.
引用
收藏
页码:2421 / 2434
页数:14
相关论文
共 46 条
  • [31] Impact of Forest Management on the Temporal Dynamics of Herbaceous Plant Diversity in the Carpathian Beech Forests over 40 Years
    Bugno-Pogoda, Anna
    Durak, Roma
    Durak, Tomasz
    BIOLOGY-BASEL, 2021, 10 (05):
  • [32] The Effects of Forest Accessibility on the Quantitative and Qualitative Characteristics of Deadwood: A Comparison between Recreational and Natural Forests
    Kiadaliri, Masoud
    Motlagh, Mohadeseh Ghanbari
    Sohrabi, Hadi
    Latterini, Francesco
    Lo Monaco, Angela
    Venanzi, Rachele
    Picchio, Rodolfo
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2023, 15 (13)
  • [33] A continental comparison indicates long-term effects of forest management on understory diversity in coniferous forests
    Schmiedinger, Andreas
    Kreyling, Juergen
    Steinbauer, Manuel J.
    Macdonald, S. Ellen
    Jentsch, Anke
    Beierkuhnlein, Carl
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH, 2012, 42 (07) : 1239 - 1252
  • [34] Effects of topography and forest stand dynamics on soil morphology in three natural Picea abies mountain forests
    Valtera, Martin
    Samonil, Pavel
    Svoboda, Miroslav
    Janda, Pavel
    PLANT AND SOIL, 2015, 392 (1-2) : 57 - 69
  • [35] Effects of topography and forest stand dynamics on soil morphology in three natural Picea abies mountain forests
    Martin Valtera
    Pavel Šamonil
    Miroslav Svoboda
    Pavel Janda
    Plant and Soil, 2015, 392 : 57 - 69
  • [36] Spatial variation in climate modifies effects of functional diversity on biomass dynamics in natural forests across Canada
    Hisano, Masumi
    Chen, Han Y. H.
    GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2020, 29 (04): : 682 - 695
  • [37] Effects of single tree selection cutting on vascular plant species diversity components in temperate forests of Hyrcanian region
    Khanalizadeh, Ameneh
    Rad, Javad Eshaghi
    Amiri, Ghavamodin Zahedi
    Zare, Habib
    Schall, Peter
    Lexer, Manfred Josef
    FLORA, 2023, 305
  • [38] Legacies from natural forest dynamics: Different effects of forest management on wood-inhabiting fungi in pine and spruce forests
    Stokland, Jogeir N.
    Larsson, Karl-Henrik
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2011, 261 (11) : 1707 - 1721
  • [39] Exploring the relationship between macrofungi diversity, abundance, and vascular plant diversity in semi-natural and managed forests in north-east Hungary
    Rudolf, Kinga
    Morschhauser, Tamas
    Pal-Fam, Ferenc
    Botta-Dukat, Zoltan
    ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2013, 28 (04) : 543 - 552
  • [40] Vascular plant taxa occurrences in exotic woodland and in natural and production forests on the Islands of Sao Miguel, Terceira and Pico (Azores)
    Silva, Lurdes Borges
    Madeira, Patricia
    Pavao, Diogo
    Elias, Rui B.
    Moura, Monica
    Silva, Luis
    BIODIVERSITY DATA JOURNAL, 2023, 11