Department of Biological and Environmental Science, University of Jyväskylä, P.O. Box 35, FI-40014, Finland.
Bavarian Forest National Park, Freyunger Str. 2, D-94481, Grafenau, Germany.
Conserv Biol. 2018 Jun;32(3):535-545. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13087. Epub 2018 Apr 16.
Limited knowledge of dispersal for most organisms hampers effective connectivity conservation in fragmented landscapes. In forest ecosystems, deadwood-dependent organisms (i.e., saproxylics) are negatively affected by forest management and degradation globally. We reviewed empirically established dispersal ecology of saproxylic insects and fungi. We focused on direct studies (e.g., mark-recapture, radiotelemetry), field experiments, and population genetic analyses. We found 2 somewhat opposite results. Based on direct methods and experiments, dispersal is limited to within a few kilometers, whereas genetic studies showed little genetic structure over tens of kilometers, which indicates long-distance dispersal. The extent of direct dispersal studies and field experiments was small and thus these studies could not have detected long-distance dispersal. Particularly for fungi, more studies at management-relevant scales (1-10 km) are needed. Genetic researchers used outdated markers, investigated few loci, and faced the inherent difficulties of inferring dispersal from genetic population structure. Although there were systematic and species-specific differences in dispersal ability (fungi are better dispersers than insects), it seems that for both groups colonization and establishment, not dispersal per se, are limiting their occurrence at management-relevant scales. Because most studies were on forest landscapes in Europe, particularly the boreal region, more data are needed from nonforested landscapes in which fragmentation effects are likely to be more pronounced. Given the potential for long-distance dispersal and the logical necessity of habitat area being a more fundamental landscape attribute than the spatial arrangement of habitat patches (i.e., connectivity sensu strict), retaining high-quality deadwood habitat is more important for saproxylic insects and fungi than explicit connectivity conservation in many cases.
大多数生物的扩散知识有限,这阻碍了在破碎景观中进行有效的连通性保护。在森林生态系统中,依赖枯木的生物(即腐生物)受到全球森林管理和退化的负面影响。我们回顾了腐生物昆虫和真菌的经验确立的扩散生态学。我们专注于直接研究(例如,标记重捕、无线电遥测)、野外实验和种群遗传分析。我们发现了两个有些相反的结果。基于直接方法和实验,扩散被限制在几公里内,而遗传研究表明,在几十公里范围内遗传结构很小,这表明存在长距离扩散。直接扩散研究和野外实验的范围很小,因此这些研究可能无法检测到长距离扩散。特别是对于真菌,需要在管理相关尺度(1-10 公里)进行更多的研究。遗传研究人员使用过时的标记物,调查了少数基因座,并且面临着从遗传种群结构推断扩散的固有困难。尽管真菌的扩散能力比昆虫更强(真菌的扩散能力更强),但似乎对于这两个群体来说,扩散本身并不是限制它们在管理相关尺度上出现的因素,而是定居和建立。由于大多数研究都集中在欧洲的森林景观,特别是北方森林地区,因此需要更多来自非森林景观的数据,因为在这些景观中,碎片化的影响可能更为明显。鉴于长距离扩散的潜力,以及栖息地面积作为景观属性比栖息地斑块的空间配置(即连通性敏感)更为基本的逻辑必要性,在许多情况下,保留高质量的枯木栖息地对于腐生物昆虫和真菌比明确的连通性保护更为重要。