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Community Turnover of Wood-Inhabiting Fungi across Hierarchical Spatial Scales

机译:分层空间尺度上的居住木材真菌的社区营业额

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摘要

For efficient use of conservation resources it is important to determine how species diversity changes across spatial scales. In many poorly known species groups little is known about at which spatial scales the conservation efforts should be focused. Here we examined how the community turnover of wood-inhabiting fungi is realised at three hierarchical levels, and how much of community variation is explained by variation in resource composition and spatial proximity. The hierarchical study design consisted of management type (fixed factor), forest site (random factor, nested within management type) and study plots (randomly placed plots within each study site). To examine how species richness varied across the three hierarchical scales, randomized species accumulation curves and additive partitioning of species richness were applied. To analyse variation in wood-inhabiting species and dead wood composition at each scale, linear and Permanova modelling approaches were used. Wood-inhabiting fungal communities were dominated by rare and infrequent species. The similarity of fungal communities was higher within sites and within management categories than among sites or between the two management categories, and it decreased with increasing distance among the sampling plots and with decreasing similarity of dead wood resources. However, only a small part of community variation could be explained by these factors. The species present in managed forests were in a large extent a subset of those species present in natural forests. Our results suggest that in particular the protection of rare species requires a large total area. As managed forests have only little additional value complementing the diversity of natural forests, the conservation of natural forests is the key to ecologically effective conservation. As the dissimilarity of fungal communities increases with distance, the conserved natural forest sites should be broadly distributed in space, yet the individual conserved areas should be large enough to ensure local persistence.
机译:为了有效利用保护资源,重要的是确定物种多样性如何在空间尺度上变化。在许多鲜为人知的物种组中,人们对保护工作应集中在哪个空间尺度上知之甚少。在这里,我们研究了如何在三个层次上实现居住木材真菌的社区转变,以及通过资源构成和空间邻近性的变化来解释多少社区变化。分层研究设计包括管理类型(固定因子),林地(随机因子,嵌套在管理类型中)和研究地块(每个研究点中随机放置的地块)。为了研究物种丰富度如何在三个等级尺度上变化,应用了随机的物种积累曲线和物种丰富度的加性划分。为了分析每个尺度上的木材居住物种和死木成分的变化,使用了线性和Permanova建模方法。居住于木材的真菌群落以稀有和不常见的物种为主。站点内和管理内的真菌群落的相似度高于站点内或两个管理类别之间的真菌群落的相似度,并且随着采样区之间距离的增加和枯木资源相似度的降低而降低。但是,这些因素只能解释社区变异的一小部分。人工林中存在的物种在很大程度上是天然林中存在的那些的子集。我们的结果表明,特别是稀有物种的保护需要很大的总面积。由于人工林几乎没有补充天然林多样性的附加价值,因此天然林的保护是生态有效保护的关键。随着真菌群落的异质性随着距离的增加而增加,自然保护区应在空间上广泛分布,但每个自然保护区应足够大以确保当地的持久性。

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