Loading…

The impacts of thinning on the fruiting of saprophytic fungi in Cryptomeria japonica plantations in central Taiwan

•The knowledge regarding thinning effects on the decomposer in forest ecosystem is needed.•We studied the community of saprotrophic macrofungi pre- and post-thinning in tropical area.•Thinning decreased species richness of saprotrophic macrofungi and altered their community.•Saprotrophic macrofungi...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Forest ecology and management 2015-01, Vol.336, p.183-193
Main Authors: Lin, Wan-Rou, Wang, Pi-Han, Chen, Ming-Chieh, Kuo, Yau-Lun, Chiang, Po-Neng, Wang, Ming-Kuang
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:•The knowledge regarding thinning effects on the decomposer in forest ecosystem is needed.•We studied the community of saprotrophic macrofungi pre- and post-thinning in tropical area.•Thinning decreased species richness of saprotrophic macrofungi and altered their community.•Saprotrophic macrofungi are very sensitive to thinning disturbances.•Population dynamics of Scytinopogon sp. could reflect influences of thinning. Forest thinning is an important method for managing forests, changing forest structure, biological diversity and community. This study examined forest thinning effects on macrofungal diversity and the environmental factors affecting fruiting and community structure. Field surveys were conducted from 2006 to 2010 in 35-year-old Cryptomeria japonica plantations in central Taiwan. Thinning was completed in October 2007 and included control, 25% thinning, and 50% thinning treatments. Each treatment had four replications. Forest thinning and time affected macrofungal species richness observed but not abundance. Thinning influenced macrofungal community compositions; however, the difference between the two thinning intensities was not significant. The macrofungal community showed significant differences between communities of eastern and northern aspect. A redundancy analysis indicated that macrofungal communities in the C. japonica plantations were significantly affected by relative humidity, light, canopy cover, soil water content, soil temperature, soil pH value and soil texture. The fruiting of a dominant coral fungal species, Scytinopogon sp., was affected by thinning and light. The fruiting bodies of this species decreased in the 25% thinning plots and disappeared in 50% thinning plots in the first two years post-thinning, but were recorded in the third year post-thinning. After thinning, macrofungal species richness observed decreased, the community changed, and changes were associated with environmental conditions. Forest thinning decreased observable macrofungal diversity and changed the community structure, and these changes were associated with environmental variation after thinning.
ISSN:0378-1127
1872-7042
DOI:10.1016/j.foreco.2014.10.022