• Title of article

    The effects of wildfires on wood-eating beetles in deciduous forests on the southern slope of the Swiss Alps

  • Author/Authors

    Moretti، Marco نويسنده , , Barbalat، Sylvie نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
  • Pages
    -84
  • From page
    85
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    The effect of fires on Cerambycidae, Buprestidae and Lucanidae were studied at 23 sites within a chestnut forest in southern Switzerland. We compared six unburnt sites, two freshly burnt sites, eight sites which burned once at different times in the last 30 years, and seven sites where fires occurred repeatedly in the last 30 years. The diversity and the species composition of the three xylobiont families were related to various ecological variables at two levels of spatial scale, a small scale of 0.25 ha and a large scale of 6.25 ha. These variables were: fire frequency, time since the last fire, clear cutting after the fire, forest structure, amount of dead wood, and habitat mosaic. The fire does not have a direct effect on the xylobiont beetles community at small scale; however, fire has an indirect effect by maintaining a relatively open forest structure. The mosaic of forest areas burnt with different frequencies and at different times was an important factor influencing species richness and species composition at the large spatial scale. Data presented here supports the strategy to conserve the diversity and includes species composition of xylobiont fauna in deciduous forests: (i) at small spatial scale, to maintain highly structured and relatively open stands with large amounts of dead wood and big oak trees; (ii) at large spatial scale, to favour a mosaic of different forest habitats and successional stages. A forest offering a good structural diversity is important for maintaining landscape complexity and thus a high species richness of xylophagous beetles.
  • Keywords
    Post-fire succession , Landscape ecology , Coleoptera , Cerambycidae , Buprestidae , Lucanidae , Species composition , Species richness , conservation , Switzerland , Forest fires , Biodiversity
  • Journal title
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
  • Serial Year
    2004
  • Journal title
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
  • Record number

    119901