12 results on '"Hjältén, Joakim"'
Search Results
2. Short-term effects of continuous cover forestry on forest biomass production and biodiversity: Applying single-tree selection in forests dominated by Picea abies.
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Ekholm, Adam, Axelsson, Petter, Hjältén, Joakim, Lundmark, Tomas, and Sjögren, Jörgen
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FORESTS & forestry ,FOREST biomass ,BIOMASS production ,SILVER fir ,FOREST productivity ,CLEARCUTTING ,DEAD trees ,FOREST management - Abstract
The rotation forestry system provides high biomass production, but could also have a negative impact on species sensitive to disturbance. Continuous cover forestry (CCF) could contribute to solving these conflicting goals, but its feasibility in nutrient limited boreal forests is yet unresolved. In a unique experiment, we simultaneously assessed the short-term effect of single-tree selection on both biomass production and biodiversity (vascular plants, bryophytes, wood-inhabiting fungi), and tested fertilization as a way to mediate growth-biodiversity trade-offs. We found that unharvested stands and stands subjected to single-tree selection had a similar species assemblage of vascular plants, bryophytes, and wood-inhabiting fungi. Fertilization increased growth by 37% and induced shifts in two understory species (favoring the grass Avenella flexuosa and disfavoring the bryophyte Hylocomium splendens). We conclude that single-tree selection may become a useful tool to enhance biodiversity in managed forests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Effects of low severity burning after clear-cutting on mid-boreal ant communities in the two years after fire
- Author
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Gibb, Heloise and Hjältén, Joakim
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- 2007
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4. Uneven-aged silviculture can enhance within stand heterogeneity and beetle diversity.
- Author
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Joelsson, Klara, Hjältén, Joakim, and Work, Timothy
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FOREST management , *INSECT diversity , *ECOLOGICAL heterogeneity , *HABITATS , *BEETLES , *SPECIES diversity , *TEMPERATURE measurements , *MANAGEMENT - Abstract
Uneven-aged silviculture may better maintain species assemblages associated with old-growth forests than clear felling in part due to habitat heterogeneity created by maintaining standing retention strips adjacent to harvest trails. Retention strips and harvest trails created at the time of tree removal will likely have different microclimate and may harbor different assemblages. In some cases, the resultant stand heterogeneity associated with uneven-aged silviculture may be similar to natural small-scale disturbances. For beetles, increased light and temperature as well as potential access to young vegetation and deadwood substrates present in harvset trails may harbor beetle assemblages similar to those found in natural gaps. We sampled saproxylic beetles using flight intercept traps placed in harvest corridors and retention strips in 9 replicated uneven-aged spruce stands in central Sweden. We compared abundance, species richness and composition between harvest corridors and retention strips using generalized linear models, rarefaction, permutational multivariate analysis of variance and indicator species analysis. Canopy openness doubled, mean temperature and variability in daily temperature increased and humidity decreased on harvest trails. Beetle richness and abundance were greater in harvests trails than in retention strips and the beetle species composition differed significantly between habitats. Twenty-five species were associated with harvest trails, including three old-growth specialists such as Agathidium discoideum (Erichson), currently red-listed. We observed only one species, Xylechinus pilosus (Ratzeburg) that strongly favored retention strips. Harvest trails foster both open habitat species and old-growth species while retention strips harbored forest interior specialists. The combination of closed canopy, stratified forest in the retention strips and gap-like conditions on the harvest trails thus increases overall species richness and maintains more diverse assemblages at the stand level than would otherwise be seen in less heterogeneous stand types. This suggests that uneven-aged silviculture may provide added conservation benefits for both open habitat and old-growth specialists than silvicultural approaches that reduce stand heterogeneity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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5. Biodiversity benefits for saproxylic beetles with uneven-aged silviculture.
- Author
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Hjältén, Joakim, Joelsson, Klara, Gibb, Heloise, Work, Timothy, Löfroth, Therese, and Roberge, Jean-Michel
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SAPROXYLIC insects ,SUSTAINABLE forestry ,CLEARCUTTING ,FOREST management ,FOREST biodiversity ,MANAGEMENT - Abstract
Large scale use of even-aged silviculture (clear-cutting) commencing in the mid-20th century has had negative impacts on forest biodiversity. As a consequence, uneven-aged silviculture is currently being considered to help meet the ecological and social criteria required for sustainable forest management. Uneven-aged silviculture (e.g. selective felling) involves selective removal of some older trees in a stand which may to some extent mimics natural small scale stand dynamics and thus potentially benefit species associated with old forests. Here we test whether selective felling benefits beetle biodiversity by producing beetle assemblages that better resemble those of old growth stands than those found in uncut production stands. We conducted a field study in northern Sweden, comparing beetles assemblages collected with window traps in three spruce dominated stand types: (1) Stands recently (on average 7 years prior to the study) subjected to selective felling ( Selective felling ), (2) mature uneven-aged stands without recent history of management, resembling selective felling stands prior to management ( Uncut ), and (3) old-growth stands with high conservation values ( Old growth ). As predicted, we found that assemblage composition was similar in selective felling and old growth stands, and that assemblages of cambivores and obligate saproxylics (marginally significant) differed between these two stand types and uncut stands. The differences were largely explained by a higher abundance of saproxylic species presumably associated with old growth conditions and large volumes of deadwood. Thus, although overall assemblage composition did not differ between stand types, part of the beetle community seemingly benefited from selective felling. We therefore recommend that selective felling is considered as an alternative to clear-felling to maintain biodiversity values. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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6. Uneven-aged silviculture can reduce negative effects of forest management on beetles.
- Author
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Joelsson, Klara, Hjältén, Joakim, Work, Timothy, Gibb, Heloise, Roberge, Jean-Michel, and Löfroth, Therese
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FORESTS & forestry ,BEETLES ,FOREST management ,BIODIVERSITY ,FOREST canopies ,OLD growth forests - Abstract
Decline in biodiversity have increased the interest in alternative forest management approaches. Uneven-aged silviculture has been proposed as a mean to maintain continuity of forest canopy cover, mimic small-scale disturbances and provide a stratified forest structure similar to that of old-growth forests and therefore better maintain species associated with unmanaged forest. We used a large-scale chronosequence study spanning 50 years to study beetle diversity in uneven-aged silviculture compared with both short-term impacts and the longer-term legacy of even-aged silviculture. We compared: (1) even-aged recently clear-felled stand, (2) even-aged recently thinned stand, (3) uneven-aged stands subjected to selective felling with (4) uneven-aged reference stands to evaluate whether abundance, species richness and composition of beetles (Coleoptera) were affected differently by even-aged than by uneven-aged management. We collected 15,147 beetles from 461 species using flight interception traps in 30 stands. Beetle composition was maintained in uneven-aged managed stands; composition did not differ from unmanaged reference stands, the exception being cambium consumers. Both even-aged silviculture treatments (clear-felling and thinning) had different beetle composition compared to the reference stands, indicating that assemblages had yet to recover even 50 years into the rotation. However, beetle composition did not differ between uneven-aged managed and thinned stands. The result supports our prediction that uneven-aged silviculture better maintains beetles assemblages associated with semi-natural mature forest than even-aged silviculture. The greater temporal continuity in selectively felled stands could benefit species dependent of mature or old growth forest since some of the needed habitat qualities are continuously available. Uneven-aged silviculture could therefore serve as an important tool for landscape planning to benefit biodiversity and thus help fulfil environmental commitments. However, uneven-aged silviculture may still alter the forest and should therefore be viewed as an alternative to even-aged silviculture, rather than to set-asides. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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7. Long-term effects of clear-cutting on epigaeic beetle assemblages in boreal forests.
- Author
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Johansson, Therese, Hjältén, Joakim, Olsson, Jörgen, Dynesius, Mats, and Roberge, Jean-Michel
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TAIGA ecology ,STAPHYLINIDAE ,ROUND fungus beetles ,CURCULIONIDAE ,PITFALL traps - Abstract
Management of boreal forests for timber production has caused changes in forest structures and disturbance regimes, which have influenced a wide range of organisms. The aim of this study was to evaluate how composition of epigaeic (ground-living) beetle assemblages is influenced by stand age and management history in a heavily managed boreal forest landscape. We compared the epigaeic assemblages among stands of three ages: (1) young (8–25 years) and (2) middle-aged (40–58 years) stands regrown after clear-cutting, and mature stands (80–130 years) that had been selectively cut historically but never clear felled. We sampled epigaeic beetles in each of 42 stands, using 10 pitfall traps during seven summer weeks. More than 9000 specimens were collected and identified. The assemblages in young stands differed from those in middle-aged and mature stands, both for the Staphylinidae (rove beetles) and all beetle families combined. Carabidae (ground beetles) composition differed between young and middle aged stands only, and assemblages of Curculionidae (weevils, bark beetles and allies) differed between young and mature stands only. Assemblages of Leiodidae (round fungus beetles) had similar composition in all three stand types. Considering all families, young stands generally harbored fewer species and lower abundances compared with middle aged and mature stands. However, the Leiodidae had similar species richness in all three stand types. The lack of differences in assemblage composition, species richness and abundance between middle aged and mature stands suggests that epigaeic beetle assemblages recolonize following clear-felling. However, our collections included large numbers of unique and usually rare species in mature stands, indicating that old forest is important for the conservation of epigaeic beetles. Furthermore, the lower abundance of these beetles in young stands indicates that an increasing proportion of young stands on managed landscapes will reduce the overall abundances of epigaeic beetle species, with potentially negative impacts on recolonization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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8. Positive effects of ecological restoration on rare and threatened flat bugs (Heteroptera: Aradidae).
- Author
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Hägglund, Ruaridh, Hekkala, Anne-Maarit, Hjältén, Joakim, and Tolvanen, Anne
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HEMIPTERA ,ARADIDAE ,FOREST management ,SPECIES hybridization ,SYMPATRIC speciation - Abstract
Intensive management of boreal forests has replaced natural disturbances, leading to losses of residual deadwood and saproxylic biodiversity. Declining population sizes have been well documented for insect groups such as bark and wood-boring beetles, whilst other groups such as flat bugs (Heteroptera: Aradidae) are less well-studied and little is known about their response to forest restoration. We conducted two restoration experiments addressing this lack of knowledge. We predicted the following responses to restoration: (1) artificial gap-creation and prescribed burning will attract more flat bugs than control stands, (2) increasing pre-burning fuel loads will have a positive influence on flat bug response to fire restoration. To test these predictions we conducted two field experiments; in Sweden we compared prescribed burning of standing forest with artificial gap-creation and in Finland we compared differing levels of fuel-load prior to burning. We found partial support for our first prediction, total numbers of flat bugs collected was higher in burned forest stands compared to controls in both countries. By contrast, gap-cutting only resulted in a marginal increase in the numbers and species of flat bugs collected. We found no support for our second hypothesis. The red-listed Aradus angularis and A. laeviusculus were primarily found in burned stands. Aradus betulae, A. betulinus and A. lugubris were more frequent in burned stands than gap-cuttings and untreated controls. Our study therefore suggests that ecological restoration, especially burning, is an efficient way of attracting flat bugs to suitable habitat, we therefore recommend ecological restoration to be incorporated in boreal forest management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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9. Environmental considerations from legislation and certification in managed forest stands: A review of their importance for biodiversity.
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Johansson, Therese, Hjältén, Joakim, de Jong, Johnny, and von Stedingk, Henrik
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FOREST management ,FOREST biodiversity ,FOREST ecology ,LANDSCAPES ,SCIENTIFIC literature ,ENVIRONMENTAL management - Abstract
Highlights: [•] We review environmental considerations in forestry with Sweden as a case study. [•] Environmental considerations in forestry have support in the scientific literature. [•] Retention levels in Sweden are low compared with ecological thresholds. [•] There is a need to better adjust the levels above thresholds from empirical studies. [•] The allocation of consideration in and among landscapes needs to be improved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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10. Short-term responses of beetle assemblages to wildfire in a region with more than 100 years of fire suppression.
- Author
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Johansson, Therese, Andersson, Jon, HjÄltÉn, Joakim, Dynesius, Mats, and Ecke, Frauke
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BEETLES ,FOREST fire prevention & control ,SAPROXYLIC insects ,FUNCTIONAL groups ,FUNGIVORES ,FOREST management ,TAIGA ecology ,CAMBIUM - Abstract
1. Suppression of wildfires in boreal landscapes has become widespread and has seriously affected many fire favoured species. However, little is known about the response of organism assemblages to large wildfires in regions with a long history of effective fire suppression, such as Scandinavia. 2. We studied the short-term effects of a >1600 ha wildfire on beetle assemblages in northern Sweden. The first summer after fire, beetles were sampled in 12 sites using 36 large window traps, half in old pine forest stands in the burned area and half in similar, but unburned control stands. The entire beetle assemblage and eight subgroups were analysed: saproxylics, non-saproxylics, moderately fire favoured, strongly fire favoured, fungivores, predators, cambium consumers and red-listed species. 3. Species composition differed markedly between burned and unburned forests in all nine groups. Furthermore, beetle abundance was higher in the burned area for the entire assemblage and for saproxylics, both groups of fire favoured species, predators and cambium consumers. Species number was higher only for non-saproxylics, strongly fire favoured species and cambium consumers. 4. Our results show that wildfire has rapid and strong effects on a wide range of beetles. However, we only trapped two individuals of fire-dependent beetles, which may suggest a lack of such species in the region, possibly due to >100 years of fire suppression. At the regional scale, the studied wildfire may potentially increase the abundance of these beetles after a longer period of reproduction in the burned area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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11. The effects of substrate manipulations and forest management on predators of saproxylic beetles.
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Johansson, Therese, Gibb, Heloise, Hjältén, Joakim, Pettersson, Roger B., Hilszczański, Jacek, Alinvi, Ola, Ball, John P., and Danell, Kjell
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FOREST management ,PREDATORY animals ,BARK beetles ,TAIGAS - Abstract
Abstract: Predatory beetles are important natural enemies of early successional cambium feeding beetles and knowledge about their ecology is of paramount importance for biological control and sustainable forest management. We used a large-scale experiment including 3 stand types (clear-cut, mature managed and old-growth stand) and 6 dead wood substrates (burned, shaded, white rot inoculated, brown rot inoculated, untreated control logs and created snags) to test substrate preferences of 10 common predatory beetle species. We collected insects in eclector traps and measured dead wood availability within 100m from the experimental logs at each site. We also tested the relationships between predators and prey at the trap level. Stand type was important for all predators; Nudobius lentus and Ampedus tristis were more abundant on clear-cuts while Phloeonomus sjoebergi, Quedius plagiatus, Epuraea boreella, Epuraea pygmaea, Epuraea angustula, Rhizophagus dispar and Epuraea laeviscula were more abundant in mature managed and old-growth stands. Snags differed most from the control logs supporting significantly more E. boreella and E. angustula and significantly less P. sjoebergi, E. pygmaea, A. tristis and R. dispar. Prey abundance proved to be more important than dead wood availability at the stand level for most species, although the response varied among species. At the trap level, the abundances of P. sjoebergi, E. laeviscula and Q. plagiatus were correlated with the abundances of their known prey species. P. sjoebergi, E. boreella, E. pygmaea, R. dispar and N. lentus were correlated with total bark beetle abundance suggesting that many predators might be less specific in their choice of prey than previously thought. The variable response of the 10 examined predatory beetles at different levels of scale suggests complex relationships with their prey and environment. The conservation of this group of beetles is important both to achieve environmental goals but also for biological control of potential pest species. Thus, conservation oriented measures needs to be performed aiming at improving both substrate and stand qualities. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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12. Variable response of different functional groups of saproxylic beetles to substrate manipulation and forest management: Implications for conservation strategies.
- Author
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Johansson, Therese, Hjältén, Joakim, Gibb, Heloise, Hilszczanski, Jacek, Stenlid, Jan, Ball, John P., Alinvi, Ola, and Danell, Kjell
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FOREST management ,TAIGAS ,BEETLES ,FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
Abstract: Different functional groups of beetles are likely to exhibit different responses to forest management and it is essential that we gain knowledge on these responses to understand and minimize the negative impacts of forestry in boreal ecosystems. In a large-scale manipulative experiment in nine sites (including 27 stands) in northern Sweden, we tested how saproxylic beetles, fire-favoured beetles and functional groups of beetles were affected by log treatment (shaded, burnt and fungi inoculated logs) and stand type (clear-cuts, mature managed and old-growth stands). All sites included one clear-cut, one mature managed stand and one old-growth stand, which give in total 27 stands. Fresh logs were placed out in the stands and exposed to different treatments. Insects were caught in eclector traps attached to the experimental logs. Log treatment, stand type and their interactions affected abundance, species richness and assemblages of saproxylic beetles, fire-favoured beetles and functional groups of beetles. Cambium consumers were less abundant on burnt logs compared with control logs. Furthermore, the assemblage composition differed between burnt logs and control logs for fire-favoured species and cambium consumers. On the clear-cuts burnt logs hosted lower abundance of all saproxylic beetles and fire-favoured species. For predators, the assemblage composition differed between burnt logs and control logs on clear-cuts. Shaded logs hosted lower abundance of wood borers compared to control logs. Shaded logs also supported different assemblages of saproxylic beetles and predators compared with the control logs on clear cuts. The effect of stand type was stronger than the effect of log treatment and for most of the examined groups; the clear-cuts differed from the mature managed and old-growth stands, while few differences was detected between mature managed and old-growth stands. The results indicate that in an area with intense forestry, both old-growth forest reserves and the creation of suitable substrates in managed forests are needed to conserve functionally intact beetle assemblages. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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