Lehmkuhl John F, Kistler Keith D, Begley James S, Boulanger John
U.S. Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, 1133 N. Western Avenue, Wenatchee, Washington 98801, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2006 Apr;16(2):584-600. doi: 10.1890/1051-0761(2006)016[0584:donfsi]2.0.co;2.
We studied northern flying squirrel (Glaucomys sabrinus) demography in the eastern Washington Cascade Range to test hypotheses about regional and local abundance patterns and to inform managers of the possible effects of fire and fuels management on flying squirrels. We quantified habitat characteristics and squirrel density, population trends, and demography in three typical forest cover types over a four-year period. We had 2034 captures of flying squirrels over 41 000 trap nights from 1997 through 2000 and marked 879 squirrels for mark-recapture population analysis. Ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) forest appeared to be poorer habitat for flying squirrels than young or mature mixed-conifer forest. About 35% fewer individuals were captured in open pine forest than in dry mixed-conifer Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) and grand fir (Abies grandis) forests. Home ranges were 85% larger in pine forest (4.6 ha) than in mixed-conifer forests (2.5 ha). Similarly, population density (Huggins estimator) in ponderosa pine forest was half (1.1 squirrels/ha) that of mixed-conifer forest (2.2 squirrels/ha). Tree canopy cover was the single best correlate of squirrel density (r = 0.77), with an apparent threshold of 55% canopy cover separating stands with low- from high-density populations. Pradel estimates of annual recruitment were lower in open pine (0.28) than in young (0.35) and mature (0.37) forest. High recruitment was most strongly associated with high understory plant species richness and truffle biomass. Annual survival rates ranged from 45% to 59% and did not vary among cover types. Survival was most strongly associated with understory species richness and forage lichen biomass. Maximum snow depth had a strong negative effect on survival. Rate of per capita increase showed a density-dependent response. Thinning and prescribed burning in ponderosa pine and dry mixed conifer forests to restore stable fire regimes and forest structure might reduce flying squirrel densities at stand levels by reducing forest canopy, woody debris, and the diversity or biomass of understory plants, truffles, and lichens. Those impacts might be ameliorated by patchy harvesting and the retention of large trees, woody debris, and mistletoe brooms. Negative stand-level impacts would be traded for increased resistance and resilience of dry-forest landscapes to now-common, large-scale stand replacement fires.
我们研究了华盛顿州东部喀斯喀特山脉北部的北美飞鼠(Glaucomys sabrinus)种群统计学特征,以检验有关区域和局部丰度模式的假设,并为管理者提供火灾和燃料管理对飞鼠可能产生的影响的相关信息。在四年时间里,我们对三种典型森林覆盖类型中的栖息地特征、松鼠密度、种群趋势和种群统计学进行了量化。从1997年到2000年,在41000个诱捕夜中,我们共捕获了2034只北美飞鼠,并标记了879只用于标记重捕种群分析。黄松(Pinus ponderosa)林对于北美飞鼠来说似乎是比年轻或成熟的混交针叶林更差的栖息地。在开阔的松林中捕获的个体数量比在干燥的混交针叶林(花旗松(Pseudotsuga menziesii)和大冷杉(Abies grandis)林)中少约35%。松林中的家域面积(4.6公顷)比混交针叶林中的家域面积(2.5公顷)大85%。同样,黄松林的种群密度(哈金斯估计值)是混交针叶林(2.2只/公顷)的一半(1.1只/公顷)。树冠覆盖率是与松鼠密度相关性最好的单一因素(r = 0.77),树冠覆盖率明显的阈值为55%,低于该阈值的林分松鼠种群密度低,高于该阈值的林分松鼠种群密度高。普拉德尔对年补充率的估计显示,开阔松林中的补充率(0.28)低于年轻林(0.35)和成熟林(0.37)。高补充率与林下植物物种丰富度和块菌生物量密切相关。年生存率在45%至59%之间,且在不同覆盖类型间没有差异。生存率与林下物种丰富度和觅食地衣生物量密切相关。最大积雪深度对生存率有强烈的负面影响。人均增长率表现出密度依赖性响应。在黄松和干燥混交针叶林中进行疏伐和规定火烧以恢复稳定的火灾模式和森林结构,可能会通过减少森林树冠层、木质残体以及林下植物、块菌和地衣的多样性或生物量,降低林分水平上的北美飞鼠密度。通过零散采伐以及保留大树、木质残体和槲寄生扫帚,这些影响可能会得到缓解。林分水平上的负面影响将换来干旱森林景观对如今常见的大规模林分更替火灾的抵抗力和恢复力的增强。