The influence of forest management history on the integrity of the saproxylic beetle fauna in an Australian lowland tropical rainforest |
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Authors: | Simon J Grove |
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Affiliation: | Biology and Conservation Branch, Forestry Tasmania, GPO Box 207B, Hobart, Tasmania 7001, Australia |
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Abstract: | Forest management in temperate and boreal regions is often based on a strong foundation of applied ecological research. Increasingly, this has allowed the needs of saproxylic (dead wood associated) insects to be addressed. However, there has been very little equivalent research in tropical forests, where saproxylic insect faunas are likely to be much richer and where forestry is usually subject to weaker environmental controls. This study compares the saproxylic beetle fauna of old-growth, selectively logged and regrowth rainforest in the Daintree lowlands of northeastern Queensland, Australia. Old-growth levels of abundance, species richness, assemblage composition and guild structure were not maintained in logged and regrowth forest, suggesting that intact assemblages may not survive in the long-term in managed tropical rainforest. However, retaining a continuous supply of commercially overmature trees in the managed stand may prevent a repeat of the widespread extinctions of saproxylic insects witnessed in temperate and boreal forest regions. |
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Keywords: | Coleoptera Sustainable forest management Saproxylic insects Australia Tropical rainforest |
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