Plewa Radosław, Jaworski Tomasz, Tarwacki Grzegorz, Gil Wojciech, Horák Jakub
Forest Research Institute, Department of Forest Protection, Sękocin Stary, Braci Leśnej 3, 05-090 Raszyn, Poland. E-mail:
Forest Research Institute, Department of Silviculture and Genetics of Forest Trees, Sękocin Stary, Braci Leśnej 3, 05-090 Raszyn, Poland. E-mail:
Zool Stud. 2020 Feb 4;59:e3. doi: 10.6620/ZS.2020.59-3. eCollection 2020.
Open habitats are disappearing from European forests. This is mainly due to various management-related practices, such as afforestation and the maintenance of closed canopy plantation forests. Open forests are also declining as a result of the abandonment of traditional forest use practices and natural succession. The effects of the establishment and maintenance of power lines as highly artificial but open habitats in forests on native insect biodiversity remain relatively poorly investigated. We investigated differences in biodiversity between forests and open habitats under power lines in Poland. Namely, we focused on nine insect taxa using the most suitable methods for data collection, , observation and trapping. The studied habitats were forests used for timber production dominated by Scots pine, which is the most commercially important tree species in Poland. In total, we recorded the presence of more than 400 insect species. We found that butterflies as well as ground beetles were significantly more biodiverse under the power lines compared with the forest interior. Furthermore, jewel beetles, long-horned beetles, weevils and bark beetles, rove beetles and darkling beetles appeared to be more species rich under the power lines, click beetles were indifferent, and only lady-bird beetles appeared to be more abundant in forests. Additionally, ground beetles with a strict affinity for forests were surprisingly not negatively affected by power lines. We highlighted the importance of forest-free areas under power lines for the improvement of native forest biodiversity. Artificial and relatively intensive management activities related to the distribution of electric energy play important roles in creating novel or alternative habitats for many insects. Our paper contributes much to the knowledge about the importance of artificial open areas for the diversity of insects.
开阔栖息地正在从欧洲森林中消失。这主要归因于各种与管理相关的做法,例如造林和维持树冠郁闭的人工林。由于传统森林利用方式的废弃和自然演替,开阔森林也在减少。作为森林中高度人工化但开阔的栖息地,输电线的建设和维护对本地昆虫生物多样性的影响仍相对缺乏研究。我们调查了波兰森林和输电线下方开阔栖息地之间的生物多样性差异。具体而言,我们使用最合适的数据收集方法,即观察和诱捕,重点研究了九个昆虫类群。所研究的栖息地是用于木材生产的森林,主要由苏格兰松主导,苏格兰松是波兰最重要的商业树种。我们总共记录了400多种昆虫的存在。我们发现,与森林内部相比,输电线下方的蝴蝶和步甲的生物多样性明显更高。此外,吉丁甲、天牛、象鼻虫和小蠹虫、隐翅虫和拟步甲在输电线下方似乎物种更为丰富,叩头虫没有差异,只有瓢虫在森林中似乎更为常见。此外,对森林有严格偏好的步甲出人意料地未受到输电线的负面影响。我们强调了输电线下方无林区域对改善本地森林生物多样性的重要性。与电能分布相关的人工且相对密集的管理活动在为许多昆虫创造新的或替代栖息地方面发挥着重要作用。我们的论文对了解人工开阔区域对昆虫多样性重要性的知识贡献很大。