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05/27/2019 15:23

Threatened beetles benefit from forest thinning

Carina Eliasson, press officer University of Gothenburg Kommunikationsavdelningen / Communications Department
Schwedischer Forschungsrat - The Swedish Research Council

    Wood-living beetles that use oak trees are a species-rich and threatened animal group in modern forestry and agriculture in southern Sweden. New research from the University of Gothenburg shows that management with conservation thinning can be an effective way to promote these beetles in the long term.

    When traditional forestry modernised in the 20th century, many of the forests in the southern and middle parts of Sweden became denser and darker than they had been before. For many species in sunlit and open forests with oak trees as their habitat, this has meant an increased risk of extinction.

    “These insects represent a large part of the biodiversity that we have committed ourselves to preserving by law and through international agreements. In addition to being beautiful and fascinating, they also play an important role in stabilizing forest ecosystems,” says Oskar Gran, at the Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences.

    Gran conducts research in the Swedish Oak Project at the University of Gothenburg, a long-term research project evaluating management alternatives for overgrown oak forests in southern Sweden.

    Compared different forest sites

    The Oak Project is studying 25 pairs of forest sites. In each pair one site is allowed to develop freely, and one is actively managed through conservation thinning. In the thinned area, about a quarter of the tree biomass is harvested for the benefit of oak trees and certain groups of organisms. Results of the two management alternatives are then followed up.

    “Nature conservation lacks long-term, experimental evaluations of different management alternatives. That makes studies such as those within the Oak Project very important as a way of finding out if our conservation measures are correct.”

    Number of species increased by one third

    Wood-inhabiting beetles are a species-rich animal group with about 400 types on the Swedish Red List of threatened and near threatened species. In the new study, Oskar Gran and his research colleagues investigated how management has impacted wood-inhabiting beetles connected with oak trees.

    “We previously knew that they responded positively to the thinning immediately after the management intervention. But the new study showed that the effect has continued and even been strengthened after 10 years,” says Gran.

    The number of wood-inhabiting beetle species connected with oaks had even increased by one third compared with the forest areas that have remained untouched.

    “This result surprised us. We expected that regrowth after thinning would have been detrimental to the animal group. In addition, we encountered a number of species that were only in the conservation-thinned areas and not in the untouched ones,” says Gran.

    Name of the article: Long-term experimental management in Swedish mixed oak-rich forests has a positive effect on saproxylic beetles after 10 years.


    Contact for scientific information:

    Contact:
    Oskar Gran, Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Gothenburg, mobile: +46 (0)700-70 85 78, email: oskar.gran@bioenv.gu.se


    Original publication:

    https://doi.org/10.1007/s10531-019-01736-5


    More information:

    https://bioenv.gu.se/forskning/huvudforskningsomraden/ekologi-naturvardsbiologi/...


    Images

    Rufous-shouldered longhorn beetle
    Rufous-shouldered longhorn beetle
    Photo Laima Bagdonaitė
    None


    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists
    Biology, Environment / ecology
    transregional, national
    Research results
    English


     

    Rufous-shouldered longhorn beetle


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