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1 August 2006 Salvage Logging, Edge Effects, and Carabid Beetles: Connections to Conservation and Sustainable Forest Management
Iain D. Phillips, Tyler P. Cobb, John R. Spence, R. Mark Brigham
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Abstract

We used pitfall traps to study the effects of fire and salvage logging on distribution of carabid beetles over a forest disturbance gradient ranging from salvaged (naturally burned and subsequently harvested) to unsalvaged (naturally burned and left standing). Significantly more carabids were caught in the salvaged forest and the overall catch decreased steadily through the edge and into the unsalvaged forest. We also noted a strong negative correlation between carabid abundance and percent vegetation cover. Beetle diversity as measured through rarefaction was significantly greater at the edge relative to both the unsalvaged and salvaged forest. This stand level study suggests that the amount of edge habitat created by salvage logging has significant implications for recovery of epigaeic beetle assemblages in burned forests by inflating the abundance of “open habitat” species in the initial communities. Carabid beetle responses to salvage logging can differ from responses to harvesting in unburned boreal forest suggesting that management of postfire forests requires special consideration.

Iain D. Phillips, Tyler P. Cobb, John R. Spence, and R. Mark Brigham "Salvage Logging, Edge Effects, and Carabid Beetles: Connections to Conservation and Sustainable Forest Management," Environmental Entomology 35(4), 950-957, (1 August 2006). https://doi.org/10.1603/0046-225X-35.4.950
Received: 12 December 2005; Accepted: 1 April 2006; Published: 1 August 2006
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KEYWORDS
boreal forest
carabid beetles
edge effects
salvage logging
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