Mossman Angus, Lambert Max R, Ashton Mark S, Wikle Jessica, Duguid Marlyse C
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States of America.
Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, United States of America.
PeerJ. 2019 Aug 30;7:e7604. doi: 10.7717/peerj.7604. eCollection 2019.
Managing forests for timber while protecting wildlife habitat is of increasing concern. Amphibians may be particularly sensitive to forest management practices due to their unique biology; however, it is not clear how different species respond to timber harvest practices-particularly over longer time scales.
Here we report on the differential responses of two salamander species-the eastern red-backed salamander ( Green) and the eastern newt ( Rafinesque)-to forest harvesting, by examining communities across a 25-year chronosequence of regenerating shelterwood harvests.
Populations of both species were lowest immediately after harvest, but increased at substantially different rates. Red-backed salamander populations were highest in 20-25 year-old shelterwoods-significantly higher than in mature, unharvested, control (100-120 year old) stands. Eastern newt populations, however, were greatest in unharvested control stands and still had not recovered to population levels found in mature stands in the 25 years since harvest. Red-backed salamander abundances were strongly tied to stand age as well as abundance of decayed coarse woody debris, suggesting that timber harvests influence some wildlife species by affecting a suite of interacting habitat variables that change over time. In contrast, newt abundances were not directly related to stand age but were more related to downed wood and vegetation characteristics. Our results highlight markedly variable responses by two common salamander species to forest harvesting-species with markedly different life histories and reproductive patterns-and that time since harvest may be useful in predicting abundance.
在保护野生动物栖息地的同时管理森林以获取木材,这一问题日益受到关注。两栖动物因其独特的生物学特性,可能对森林管理实践尤为敏感;然而,尚不清楚不同物种对木材采伐实践的反应如何,尤其是在较长时间尺度上。
在此,我们通过研究再生择伐收获后长达25年的时间序列中的群落,报告了两种蝾螈物种——东部红背蝾螈(格林)和东部蝾螈(拉菲内斯克)对森林采伐的不同反应。
两种物种的种群数量在采伐后立即降至最低,但随后以截然不同的速率增加。红背蝾螈种群数量在20 - 25年生的择伐林中最高,显著高于成熟、未采伐的对照(100 - 120年生)林分。然而,东部蝾螈种群数量在未采伐的对照林分中最大,并且在采伐后的25年里仍未恢复到成熟林分中的种群水平。红背蝾螈的丰度与林分年龄以及腐烂粗木质残体的丰度密切相关,这表明木材采伐通过影响一系列随时间变化的相互作用的栖息地变量来影响一些野生动物物种。相比之下,蝾螈的丰度与林分年龄没有直接关系,而是与倒伏木材和植被特征更为相关。我们的结果突出了两种常见蝾螈物种对森林采伐的明显不同反应——这两种物种具有明显不同的生活史和繁殖模式——并且采伐后的时间可能有助于预测丰度。