首页|Disentangling the importance of space and host tree for the beta-diversity of beetles, fungi, and bacteria: Lessons from a large dead-wood experiment

Disentangling the importance of space and host tree for the beta-diversity of beetles, fungi, and bacteria: Lessons from a large dead-wood experiment

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? 2022 Elsevier LtdForestry in Europe changed the tree species composition and reduced dead-wood amount and heterogeneity, and therefore negatively affected saproxylic diversity. Efficient conservation requires knowledge about the importance of the relevant diversity drivers across taxa. We examined the relative importance of space vs. host for saproxylic diversity at a spatial extend of 600 km in Germany. Further, we disentangled effects of among regions, forest stands, host clades, and tree species on saproxylic diversity. This allows inferences for spatial- and host tree-related conservation strategies. Beetle, fungal sporocarp, molecular-derived fungal, and bacterial communities were studied in a large nested dead-wood experiment comprising 11 tree species. We used multiplicative diversity partitioning to assess the diversity of rare, typical, and dominant species. The beta-diversity of beetles and fungal sporocarps was equally explained by space and host, but that of molecular fungi and bacteria mainly by the host. Across taxa, beta-diversity was higher among forest stands than among regions. However, for beetles and fungal sporocarps, differences among regions were also important. Host tree clade and host tree species were important for beetle and host clade for fungal sporocarp beta-diversity. Host tree species was more important than host clade for the beta-diversity of molecular fungi and bacteria. The divergent response of different taxa to space and host calls into question the use of a simple spatially-centered or host-centered strategy. Instead, a high dead-wood tree species diversity on a broad spatial coverage at the national scale in temperate European forests is necessary to maintain rare and abundant species.

Beta-partitioningCross-taxonomicForest conservationRegionalSaproxylicSpatial scaleTree species

Moll J.、Purahong W.、Hofrichter M.、Kellner H.、Hoppe B.、Kahl T.、Weisser W.W.、Rieker D.、Krah F.-S.、Uhl B.、Bassler C.、Gossner M.M.、Ambarli D.、Seibold S.、Baber K.、Buscot F.

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Department of Soil Ecology UFZ - Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research

International Institute Zittau Chair of Environmental Biotechnology TU Dresden

Julius Kühn Institute (JKI) – Federal Research Centre for Cultivated Plants Institute for National and International Plant Health

Biosphere Reserve Thuringian Forest

Terrestrial Ecology Department of Ecology and Ecosystem Management Technical University of Munich

Institute for Ecology Evolution and Diversity Goethe University Frankfurt

Forest Entomology Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL

Terrestrial Ecology Research Group Department of Life Science Systems School of Life Sciences Technical University of Munich

Senckenberg Museum of Natural History G?rlitz

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2022

Biological Conservation

Biological Conservation

SCI
ISSN:0006-3207
年,卷(期):2022.268
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