"Effects of timber harvest on forest lepidoptera: community, guild, and species responses"
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Authors
Summerville, Keith S.
Crist, Thomas O.
Issue Date
2002
Type
Article
Language
en_US
Keywords
Biodiversity , Canonical Correspondence Analsis (CCA) , Clear-cutting , Community composition , Disturbance , Landscape , Lepidoptera , Logging , Ohio , Species richness
Alternative Title
Abstract
Abstract. Two pressing questions for forestry and conservation biology are whether periodic logging in forest ecosystems significantly changes biodiversity and whether the changes can be mitigated through appropriate harvest methods. Such questions of timber resource management, however, are rarely applied to nonpest insect species, particularly in temperate forest systems. We studied the effects of timber harvest on species richness, abundance, and community composition of forest Lepidoptera (moths). Moths were sampled in 16 forest stands occurring in two watersheds (managed and wilderness) in southeastern Ohio during summer 2000. Stands were chosen from one of four management categories:
clear-cut, selectively logged, unlogged, and wilderness. Specifically, we tested the following
predictions: (1) shifts in moth community composition would be affected by postharvest
changes in stand structure and floristic composition, (2) variation in species richness would be determined by the magnitude of the logging disturbance, and (3) unlogged stands within managed landscapes would contain different species assemblages compared to wilderness stands.
Canonical correspondence analysis (CCA) revealed significant compositional differences among moth communities sampled from forest stands differing in harvest regime. Variation among moth communities was mainly attributable to postharvest changes in stand floristic composition rather than stand structure. Postdisturbance shifts in moth community composition were related to the magnitude of displacement of a given forest stand to earlier successional stages. We also found that both species richness of the overall moth community and several feeding guilds were significantly lower in clear-cut stands, but species richness did not differ between selectively logged and unlogged stands. Thus, selective logging appears to be a better strategy for timber harvest when concern is for maintaining species richness of Lepidoptera within stands. Finally, although no differences were detected in
overall species richness or abundance of moths sampled from stands in managed or wilderness
watersheds, the CCA suggested that the surrounding landscape influenced the variation in community composition within and among forest stands. Therefore, we suggest that the long-term maintenance of lepidopteran species diversity and community composition within temperate deciduous forests managed for timber may ultimately depend on successful regeneration of harvested stands to precut floristic composition as well as the
preservation of larger areas of unlogged forests.
Description
Keith S. Summerville is a professor of Environmental Science in the Department of Environmental Science and Policy. He can be contacted at keith.summerville@drake.edu
Citation
Ecological Applications, 12(3), 2002, pp. 820–835
Publisher
Ecological Society of America
License
Journal
Volume
Issue
PubMed ID
DOI
ISSN
1051-0761