Old-forest species: the importance of specific substrata vs. stand continuity in the case of calicioid fungi

Appropriate conservation management of old-forest species depends on the causes of their old-forest affinity, which, however, are insufficiently known. Calicioid fungi are often considered old-forest dependent because of their special requirements for microhabitat, microclimate, and s...

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Main Authors: Lõhmus, Asko, Lõhmus, Piret
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Finnish Society of Forest Science 2011-01-01
Series:Silva Fennica
Online Access:https://www.silvafennica.fi/article/84
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spelling doaj-2ecfca6c4fb240d48a45e22fa1d447f22020-11-25T02:21:36ZengFinnish Society of Forest ScienceSilva Fennica2242-40752011-01-0145510.14214/sf.84Old-forest species: the importance of specific substrata vs. stand continuity in the case of calicioid fungiLõhmus, AskoLõhmus, Piret Appropriate conservation management of old-forest species depends on the causes of their old-forest affinity, which, however, are insufficiently known. Calicioid fungi are often considered old-forest dependent because of their special requirements for microhabitat, microclimate, and stand continuity for at least two tree generations. We demonstrate that, for several methodological or interpretational problems, published studies do not provide unequivocal evidence for such mechanisms and even for old-forest dependency of calicioids in general. We then analyse a large Estonian dataset (ca. 2300 records of 32 species) representing various management types and site types to answer whether old forests have more calicioid species, and any specific species, than could be expected for the substratum availability observed. Although old growth had more species and records than mature managed stands or cutover sites, those substratum types that occurred at roughly similar abundances also hosted comparable numbers of species in different management types. The characteristic substrata adding extra species to old growth were snags and root-plates of treefall mounds; wood surfaces in general comprised more than half of all calicioid records. Although substratum abundance did not fully explain the species-richness contrast between old growth and mature stands, additional evidence suggested that the unexplained variance is rather due to small-scale habitat characteristics than stand-scale continuity or microclimate. Finally, we review the evidence for old-forest affinity of calicioid species and distinguish a set of threatened species. We conclude that the availability of specific substrata is the main limiting factor for calicioid fungi in forests, and its quantitative and stochastic nature explains the large random and region-specific variation in the published lists of âold-forest speciesâ.https://www.silvafennica.fi/article/84
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lõhmus, Asko
Lõhmus, Piret
spellingShingle Lõhmus, Asko
Lõhmus, Piret
Old-forest species: the importance of specific substrata vs. stand continuity in the case of calicioid fungi
Silva Fennica
author_facet Lõhmus, Asko
Lõhmus, Piret
author_sort Lõhmus, Asko
title Old-forest species: the importance of specific substrata vs. stand continuity in the case of calicioid fungi
title_short Old-forest species: the importance of specific substrata vs. stand continuity in the case of calicioid fungi
title_full Old-forest species: the importance of specific substrata vs. stand continuity in the case of calicioid fungi
title_fullStr Old-forest species: the importance of specific substrata vs. stand continuity in the case of calicioid fungi
title_full_unstemmed Old-forest species: the importance of specific substrata vs. stand continuity in the case of calicioid fungi
title_sort old-forest species: the importance of specific substrata vs. stand continuity in the case of calicioid fungi
publisher Finnish Society of Forest Science
series Silva Fennica
issn 2242-4075
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Appropriate conservation management of old-forest species depends on the causes of their old-forest affinity, which, however, are insufficiently known. Calicioid fungi are often considered old-forest dependent because of their special requirements for microhabitat, microclimate, and stand continuity for at least two tree generations. We demonstrate that, for several methodological or interpretational problems, published studies do not provide unequivocal evidence for such mechanisms and even for old-forest dependency of calicioids in general. We then analyse a large Estonian dataset (ca. 2300 records of 32 species) representing various management types and site types to answer whether old forests have more calicioid species, and any specific species, than could be expected for the substratum availability observed. Although old growth had more species and records than mature managed stands or cutover sites, those substratum types that occurred at roughly similar abundances also hosted comparable numbers of species in different management types. The characteristic substrata adding extra species to old growth were snags and root-plates of treefall mounds; wood surfaces in general comprised more than half of all calicioid records. Although substratum abundance did not fully explain the species-richness contrast between old growth and mature stands, additional evidence suggested that the unexplained variance is rather due to small-scale habitat characteristics than stand-scale continuity or microclimate. Finally, we review the evidence for old-forest affinity of calicioid species and distinguish a set of threatened species. We conclude that the availability of specific substrata is the main limiting factor for calicioid fungi in forests, and its quantitative and stochastic nature explains the large random and region-specific variation in the published lists of âold-forest speciesâ.
url https://www.silvafennica.fi/article/84
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