Bug Communities and Forest Structure Modification - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Bug Communities and Forest Structure Modification

Description:

Bug Communities and Forest Structure Modification Andy Moldenke Carolyn Ver Linden Bugs, bugs, bugs and more bugs! Bugs rule!! Shade versus sun On an individual ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:43
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 47
Provided by: moldenka
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Bug Communities and Forest Structure Modification


1
Bug Communities and Forest Structure Modification
  • Andy Moldenke
  • Carolyn Ver Linden

2
Bugs, bugs, bugs and more bugs!Bugs rule!!
3
Shade versus sun
  • On an individual species preference basis
  • Climatic
  • Bombus mixtus
  • Thermoregulation easier to locomote in
    open-canopy environment
  • Eukiefferiella spp (flying adults)
  • Visibility easier to find mate in open-canopy
    environment
  • Resource
  • For both, easier to find more food

4
  • Individual species preference basis
  • Is this interesting only for endangered
    species?
  • (after all who cares about a single species of
    arthropod?)
  • Bombus mixtus is probably a keystone species

5
Shade versus sun
  • On a functional guild preference basis
  • Herbivores prefer sunny conditions
  • More photosynthesis
  • More young leaves
  • More broadleafed plants
  • Higher caloric status
  • Lower poisonous secondary compounds
  • (but less nitrogen)
  • (but higher vertebrate predator populations)

6
Shade versus sun
  • A whole taxon preference basis
  • Bees
  • Nesting requirement sunny bare ground
  • Jumping spiders
  • Wolf-spiders
  • Visual pursuit hunting diurnal predators
  • Butterflies

7
  • Whole taxon basis
  • Bees
  • Responsible for pollination
  • Responsible for fruit/seed resource (vertebrate
    food)
  • Diurnal activity
  • Responsible for shift from mammals amphibian
    predators to birds and reptiles

8
Shade versus sun
  • Total community species richness basis
  • On a localized basis, much higher in early
    succession
  • Basic reason
  • Nearly all closed-canopy taxa PLUS open-canopy
    obligates too (if not trashed)

9
Shade versus sun
  • Continental-scale distribution of
  • Madrotertiary and Arctotertiary biota
  • Glacial cycles of migration of taxa

Add north america map
10
Californian biota summer-dry adapted
thermophilic largely open-canopy preference
  • Prefer
  • open-canopy meadows
  • savanna (oak ponderosa)
  • Willamette Valley grasslands
  • (often disturbance fire-adapted)
  • (not very important in mesic west-side
    Douglas-fir forests)

11
  • The macroevolutionary scale
  • Evolutionary plug for open-canopy species
  • Small populations
  • Rapid local extinctions
  • Northern edge of species distributions
  • Important for adaptation to climatic changes
  • exposure to novel biotic
    interactions
  • (with both native introduced taxa)

12
Ecosystem function changes with clearcutting
  • 1 Changing the position of the photosyn-
  • thetic biomass (canopy to herb/shrub
    layer)
  • and changing the edibility of the
    photosynthetic biomass (awful distasteful
    evergreen needles to short-term edible deciduous
    leaves)

13
  • This change in plant species composition
    results in a HUGE change in the species
    composition of animals and their biomass
    increases (because of increased edibility of food)

14
Opening the canopy
Open-canopy Forest
15
  • Functional guild basis
  • Herbivorous caterpillars
  • Joans birds run on herbivorous caterpillars
  • Collector/gatherer aquatic midges
  • Flycatchers and bats and fish too
  • (and more important things like web-spinning
    spiders too)

16
Opening the canopy
Open-canopy versus closed-canopy foodwebs
17
How open is open?
  • Effect of 1 acre gap openings
  • Forest Canopy
  • Indicator Species 11
  • Open Canopy
  • Indicator Species 42
  • The presence of open canopy species is logical
    (even though the gap is very small but the is
    surprisingly high!)

18
Ecosystem function changes with clearcutting
  • 2 Fundamental alteration of soil water
  • relations
  • Trees (all plants, but especially trees) are like
    fountains pumping water out of the ground and
    back into the atmosphere

19
Remove the trees (w of the mountains) and there
is plenty of water to go around during the summer
months
  • Plants can fix photosynthetic carbon all summer
    long (instead of shutting down in
    August-September)
  • Soil microbes have water so they can metabolize
    all summer long (and the bugs that eat them also)
    so they can provide nutrients for plant growth
    all summer long
  • (no stop/start as in control forested sites)

20
You have to judge by ecological function
  • In a thinning the flush of annual vegetation is
    initially mineralized (decomposed) at the start
    of the fall rainy season the pulse of soluble
    nutrients are picked up by the remaining tree
    roots and mycorrhizae
  • (more available nothing lost good
    good)
  • In the clearcut (especially if followed by a hot
    burn and herbicides) there are few/no live roots
    to absorb the fall nutrient flush nutrients are
    lost to ground water
  • (more available most lost good bad)

21
Opening the canopy
  • Open versus closed canopy faunas
  • 1. many years of Andrews Forest studies reveals
    that the two are nearly entirely distinct
  • 2. both faunas VERY diverse
  • 3. about 50 of species of total arthropod fauna
    of forested regions is restricted to the short
    temporal windows (15-30 yrs.) of open canopy
  • WOW! Surprising!

22
Opening the canopy
  • Species Richness
    Total Abundance
  • Forested Canopy 318 9575
  • Clearcut 489 7942
  • (per 250 samples each)
  • Clearcuts are unsightly--
  • but clearcuts very speciose
  • clearcuts very productive

23
  • Total species richness basis
  • Spiders ½ of total fauna only in first 15 years
    post-harvest
  • Bees 1-2 under closed-canopy versus 250
    post-harvest (other groups too butterflies,
    grasshoppers, etc.)
  • Pitfall-trapping fauna richness increases 1.5
    2.0x.

24
Aquatic environments
  • Density and biomass of emergent aquatics
    increases (1.5-2.5x)(fixed sunlight)
  • Biggest response is in Diptera (esp. midges, not
    EPTs)
  • Richness shows very modest increase
  • (few, if any, forest canopy taxa are lost
    entirely)
  • (in contrast with terrestrial fauna, little
    turnover in species)
  • (more emergent biomass results in higher
    percentage of predaceous species)

25
Ecosystem function changes with clearcutting
3 Pollination of the flora ( reproduction)
  • Canopy removal increases light
  • Allows plants to fix more energy
  • Allows plants to make flowers fruits
  • Canopy removal increases light
  • Allows air temperature to increase for
    cold-blooded
  • insect activity of pollinators
  • Logging disturbance provides nesting
    opportunities
  • Plants get pollinated
  • Seeds fruits provide additional resources for
    vertebrates

26
Soopen- and closed-canopy bugs are different
  • What makes any one open-canopy stand better
    than any other?

27
  • Predaceous species respond in basically the same
    manner to all types of canopy openings (probably
    the same as most vertebrates species)
  • The driving environmental variable is
    productivity (total photosynthetic biomass
    deciduous/conifer ratio)
  • native predators introduced predators
    individual plant species present no difference

28
  • For herbivores and shredders it is a different
    story
  • Amount and species of CWD and types of individual
    plant species are crucial for determining insect
    assemblages.

29
Lets hear it for clearcuts!
  • industrial-grade clearcuts with low-to-moderate
    burn site prep have the highest diversity of
    insects (esp. if some slash is piled)
  • Usually highest herbaceous component
  • (burn removes litter)
  • Greatest growth rate of shrubs
  • (burn mineralizes nitrogen)
  • Best pollination and seed set
  • (burn produces bee nesting sites)

30
However,
  • If burn is too hot
  • If legacy of dead wood is not left
  • If herbicides are used
  • then legacy is gone
  • introduced weeds/pests flourish
  • erosion ensues

31
Caveat
  • Nearly all post-harvest changes have short
    half-lives, BUT
  • 1) Natural post-harvest foodweb change
    shifts system towards more bacterial-based energy
    flow.
  • 2) If soil ecosystem is shifted too far
    towards a bacterial-based foodweb, then a certain
    class of microbes may develop which prevents the
    recolonization of ectomycorrhizal fungi and
    subsequent conifer recolonization.

32
(No Transcript)
33
(No Transcript)
34
(No Transcript)
35
Riparian Zone Fauna Composition
  • How far does riparian influence extend away from
    stream?

36
Riparian Hotspots
  • Species Richness Total Abundance
  • Forest Floor 13.6c 32.6c
  • Veg break 15.8b 44.4b
  • Riparian 19.0a 65.6a
  • (p lt0.004) (plt0.00001)
  • (Green Peak August)

37
Riparian Zone Fauna Composition
Forest floor Riparian
38
Riparian Zone Fauna Composition
  • Indicator species numerous
  • Example Pterostichus crenicollis
  • Big, easy to identify, abundant, widespread
  • geographically, active most of the year
  • With several such indicator species, can assay
    for
  • effect of management activities in riparian
    zone
  • (extra margin of safety for aquatic
    portion)
  • (fish lobby
    drinking water)

39
(No Transcript)
40
Forest-floor invertebrates
Millipedes
Beetles
Spiders
Mollusks
41
(No Transcript)
42
  • Individual species preference basis
  • Is this interesting only for endangered
    species?
  • (after all who cares about a single species of
    arthropod?)
  • Bombus mixtus is probably a keystone species

43
Forest (97 species)
F. Köhler
1 m
5-70 m
(2 species)
(1 species _at_ 20 m)
44
Management treatments
45
Management treatments (134 species)
Total r2 .84 Axis 1 .18 Axis 2 .51
Buffer/Forest (9 species)
Clearcut (19 species)
46
Buffer vs. Forest edge effects?


Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com