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Non-native plantation forests as alternative habitat for native forest beetles in a heavily modified landscape

The once extensive native forests of New Zealand’s central North Island are heavily fragmented, and the scattered remnants are now surrounded by a matrix of exotic pastoral grasslands and Pinus radiata plantation forests. The importance of these exotic habitats for native biodiversity is poorly unde...

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Published in:Biodiversity and conservation 2008-05, Vol.17 (5), p.1127-1148
Main Authors: Pawson, Stephen M., Brockerhoff, Eckehard G., Meenken, Esther D., Didham, Raphael K.
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description The once extensive native forests of New Zealand’s central North Island are heavily fragmented, and the scattered remnants are now surrounded by a matrix of exotic pastoral grasslands and Pinus radiata plantation forests. The importance of these exotic habitats for native biodiversity is poorly understood. This study examines the utilisation of exotic plantation forests by native beetles in a heavily modified landscape. The diversity of selected beetle taxa was compared at multiple distances across edge gradients between each of the six possible combinations of adjacent pastoral, plantation, clearfell and native forest land-use types. Estimated species richness (Michaelis–Menten) was greater in production habitats than native forest; however this was largely due to the absence of exotic species in native forest. Beetle relative abundance was highest in clearfell-harvested areas, mainly due to colonisation by open-habitat, disturbance-adapted species. More importantly, though, of all the non-native habitats sampled, beetle species composition in mature P. radiata was most similar to native forest. Understanding the influence of key environmental factors and stand level management is important for enhancing biodiversity values within the landscape. Native habitat proximity was the most significant environmental correlate of beetle community composition, highlighting the importance of retaining native remnants within plantation landscapes. The proportion of exotic beetles was consistently low in mature plantation stands, however it increased in pasture sites at increasing distances from native forest. These results suggest that exotic plantation forests may provide important alternative habitat for native forest beetles in landscapes with a low proportion of native forest cover.
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source Springer Nature:Jisc Collections:Springer Nature Read and Publish 2023-2025: Springer Reading List
subjects Biodiversity
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Climate Change/Climate Change Impacts
Community composition
Conservation Biology/Ecology
Ecology
Environmental factors
Forest management
Forests
Grasslands
Habitats
Indigenous plants
Indigenous species
Insects
Introduced plants
Introduced species
Land use
Landscape ecology
Life Sciences
Original Paper
Pasture
Pinus radiata
Plantations
Relative abundance
Species composition
Species richness
title Non-native plantation forests as alternative habitat for native forest beetles in a heavily modified landscape
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