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Dryad

Data from: Effects of management on aquatic tree-hole communities in temperate forests are mediated by detritus amount and water chemistry

Cite this dataset

Gossner, Martin M. et al. (2016). Data from: Effects of management on aquatic tree-hole communities in temperate forests are mediated by detritus amount and water chemistry [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.8d0r0

Abstract

1. Arthropod communities in water-filled tree-holes may be sensitive to impacts of forest management, for example via changes in environmental conditions such as resource input. 2. We hypothesized that increasing forest management intensity negatively affects arthropod abundance and richness and shifts community composition and trophic structure of tree-hole communities. We predicted that this shift is caused by reduced habitat and resource availability at the forest stand scale as well as reduced tree-hole size, detritus amount and changed water chemistry at the tree-hole scale. 3. We mapped 910 water-filled tree-holes in two regions in Germany and studied 199 tree-hole inhabiting arthropod communities. 4. We found that increasing forest management intensity indeed significantly reduced arthropod abundance and richness in water-filled tree-holes. The most important indirect effects of management intensity on tree-hole community structure were the reduced amounts of detritus for the tree-hole inhabiting organisms and changed water chemistry at the tree-hole scale, both of which seem to act as a habitat filter. Although habitat availability at the forest stand scale decreased with increasing management intensity, this unexpectedly increased local arthropod abundance in individual tree-holes. However, regional species richness in tree-holes significantly decreased with increasing management intensity, most likely due to decreased habitat diversity. We did not find that the management-driven increase in plant diversity at the forest stand scale affected communities of individual tree-holes, for example via resource availability for adults. 5. Our results suggest that management of temperate forests has to target a number of factors at different scales to conserve diverse arthropod communities in water-filled tree holes.

Usage notes

Location

Biosphere Reserve Swabian Alb
National Park Hainich
Germany
Hainich-Dün