首页期刊导航|Forest Ecology and Management
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Forest Ecology and Management
Elsevier Science
Forest Ecology and Management

Elsevier Science

0378-1127

Forest Ecology and Management/Journal Forest Ecology and ManagementSCIISTPEIAHCI
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    Active restoration of secondary and degraded forests in the context of the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration

    Bieng, Marie Ange NgoFinegan, BryanSist, Plinio
    4页

    Soil characteristics and microbial community structure on along elevation gradient in a Pinus armandii forest of the Qinling Mountains, China

    Ren, KunYe, XuanQu, ZhiPei, Yuanjie...
    12页
    查看更多>>摘要:Lots of studies have shown that elevation, plant species, and soil characteristics and their relationships significantly affect microbial community in forest soils. However, how do elevation, soil characteristics, and their relationship affect microbial community in the same plant community in different latitudes, such as warm temperature zone and subtropical zone, remains unclear. Here, microbial community structure, soil characteristics, and their relationship were analyzed in Pinus armandii forests in subtropical zone at an altitude of 1700-2300 m in the Huoditang Forest of the Qinling Mountains, China. Bacterial and fungal communities were analyzed by Illumina sequencing. Elevation showed a significant effect on soil organic matter (SOM) and pH. Proteobacteria, Acidobacteria, Ascomycota, and Basidiomycota were higher abundant phyla across elevations. Ectomycorrhizal fungi abundance decreased with increasing elevation. The fungi richness decreased with increasing elevation and was negatively and significantly correlated with SOM and elevation. The relative abundance of Acidobacteria, Verrucomicrobia, Sordariomycetes, and Eurotiomycetes and Ectomycorrhizal fungi abundance was significantly correlated with soil pH. Additionally, Agaricomycetes abundance was positively correlated (p < 0.05) with available potassium (AK) in soils. Elevation, pH, soil temperature, SOM, and AK were significant factors affecting microbial communities according to the data on Pearson and redundancy analyses. Overall, responses of soil characteristics to elevation significantly affected microbial community structure in P. armandii forests of the Qinling Mountains. The results will make us better understand the roles of microbial communities in providing ecosystem services in subtropical forests.

    Following the damage: Increasing western barbastelle bat activity in bark beetle infested stands in Bialowieza Primeval forest

    Rachwald, AlekCiesielski, MariuszSzurlej, MartaZmihorski, Michal...
    7页
    查看更多>>摘要:Natural forest disturbances are increasingly common due to ongoing climate changes but their impact on most of forest organisms is poorly studied. Here we investigate the link between spruce bark beetle Ips typographus outbreak in 2011-2017 in Bialowieza Primeval Forest (Poland) and activity of a forest bat of conservation concern: the western barbastelle Barbastella barbastellus. Bats were surveyed by recording ultrasound signals on 8 transects (3 km each) in a mixed coniferous and deciduous forest with a different share of Norway spruce. The activity pattern of bats was found to correlate with the number of bark beetle infested Norway spruces in the following years within a 1 km buffers of the transects (339,354 trees in total) using generalised additive mixed models. We demonstrated that the number of bark beetle infested spruces was a positive predictor of barbastelle activity largely with 1- and 2-year lags: number of spruces infested in a year correlates with bat activity one and two years later. This latency period most likely mirrors the decomposition process in standing dead spruces. We suspect that the massive appearance of dying Norway spruces provides the barbastelle with roosting sites under the bark and may lead barbastelle to colonize spruce stands otherwise rarely occupied by this species. It cannot be excluded, however, that other mechanisms (e.g. increased food biomass or availability) also drive the barbastelle to colonize stands infested by bark beetle. Our findings suggest that salvage logging and dead spruce removal, routinely implemented in stands infested by bark beetle, including Bialowieza Primeval Forest, may negatively impact western barbastelle population.