Combining tree species and decay stages to increase invertebrate diversity in dead wood

Joke I. Andringa, Juan Zuo, Matty P. Berg, Roy Klein, Jip van't Veer, Rick de Geus, Marco de Beaumont, Leo Goudzwaard, Jurgen van Hal, Rob Broekman, Richard S.P. van Logtestijn, Yikang Li, Saori Fujii, Mark Lammers, Mariet M. Hefting, Ute Sass-Klaassen, Johannes H.C. Cornelissen*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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    Abstract

    Dead wood availability and the variability in dead wood quality, i.e. tree species and decay stages, are often low in managed forests, which negatively affects biodiversity of invertebrate species. Leaving more (coarse) dead wood can increase invertebrate richness, but it remains unclear how many and which combinations of tree taxa and decay stages are required to optimize niche heterogeneity in managed forests. We investigated the diversity of the main arthropod groups associated with dead wood, i.e. millipedes, centipedes, isopods and beetles, through the first four years of decomposition of logs of twenty common temperate tree species placed in the “common garden” experiment LOGLIFE. We hypothesized that (1) invertebrate richness for combinations of a given number of tree species would be promoted by mixing both tree species and decay period and that (2) invertebrate richness increases up to a saturation point with more tree species at different decay stages added. We also hypothesized that (3) an increase in phylogenetic distance among the tree species in combinations would promote their overall invertebrate diversity. We found that the better combinations, in terms of invertebrate richness, after one and two years of decay, but not after four years, consisted of a mix of gymnosperms and angiosperms, indicating that variation in tree species is especially important during the initial decomposition period. The best combinations in terms of invertebrate richness consisted of at least one tree species from each decay period, indicating that also variation in the decay stage of the tree is important to promote invertebrate diversity. We observed that at least four wood types were required to approach the 95% saturation point for species richness. The third hypothesis, that dissimilarity in phylogenetic position could be a predictive tool for increasing invertebrate richness in combinations of tree species, was not supported by our results. Thus, in order to maintain diversity of dead wood invertebrates in forests we recommend not only to provide richness in tree species, but also to plant particular combinations of trees (preferably angiosperm-gymnosperm combinations) that differ in the invertebrate communities they typically host and to temporally spread the logging of trees. This way the logging residues cover different resources and habitats at each moment in time, which is likely to result in a large diversity of dead wood invertebrates.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)80-88
    Number of pages9
    JournalForest Ecology and Management
    Volume441
    Early online date23 Mar 2019
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2019

    Funding

    We thank many other Loglife team members for their valuable help with invertebrate extractions or identifications, including several students, i.e. Veerle Ammerlaan, Jasper Nusselder, Gert Neurink, Kasper Steenbergen, and Orsi Decker. We are grateful to Staatsbosbeheer (State Forestry Commission) Flevoland and the Schovenhorst Estate for making their sites and trees available for this research. Guofang Liu is gratefully acknowledged for providing the phylogenetic tree. JZ acknowledges a PhD grant from the China Scholarship Council ( 2011699001 ). Appendix A

    Keywords

    • Biodiversity
    • Chilipoda
    • Coarse woody debris
    • Coleoptera
    • Diplopoda
    • Habitat heterogeneity
    • Invertebrates
    • Isopoda
    • Managed forest
    • Wood decomposition

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