Edge effects on forest litter beetles in streamside and slope habitats in relation to reserve design
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Project name: Edge effects on forest litter beetles in streamside and slope habitats in relation to reserve design
Year started: 2000
Project number: WRA065
Primary investigator: Sue Baker
Other investigator(s): Alastair Richardson, Leon Barmuta, Peter McQuillan
Enquiries: warra.enquiries@forestrytas.com.au
Organisation(s): University of Tasmania
Project type: Doctoral
Project status: Completed

<I>Decilaus striatus</I>

Decilaus striatus

Image: Lynne Forster

<I>Choleva</I> TFIC sp 01

Choleva TFIC sp 01

Image: Lynne Forster

The edge separating a recently clearfelled coupe from neighbouring unharvested forest.

The edge separating a recently clearfelled coupe from neighbouring unharvested forest.

Image: Sue Baker

Project summary:

Sue baker’s thesis abstract:

Limited understanding of the ecology of ground-dwelling invertebrates in Tasmania has hampered our ability to assess the adequacy of forest management. This thesis documents the distributions of ground-dwelling beetle assemblages in managed, wet eucalypt forests of southern Tasmania, and explores the response of beetles to ecological gradients caused by riparian influences near small streams (since retained riparian corridors are a major conservation tool), and edge effects from recently clearfelled logging coupes.

Beetles responded to riparian influences, showing subtle shifts in assemblage composition, and generally reduced abundance or species richness nearer to streams. However, site differences outweighed riparian effects. The beetles’ assemblage composition differed substantially between young logging regeneration and mature forest: several species were identified as indicators of each habitat. Beetles responded more strongly to edge effects than to riparian influences. Depth of edge influence extended about 22 m into unlogged non-riparian forest, but further into streamside reserve edges (up to about 65 m). Four beetle species, Choleva TFIC sp 01 (Leiodidae), Decilaus nigronotatus, D. lateralis and D. striatus (all Curculionidae), were indicators of mature forest interior. In the second survey, streamside reserves (average width 40 m (+ or – 6 m, 95% CI) from reserve edge to stream) supported different beetle assemblages to unlogged areas, and were probably entirely edge-effected. These results suggest that current corridor provisions, which rely heavily on riparian reserves, may be inadequate to conserve beetles dependent on mature forest interior. Reserve corridors may need to be wider, and should more often be positioned upslope away from riparian areas. Alternatively, a mix of different types of reservation strategies (e.g. conserving some contiguous blocks of mature forest in lieu of widened corridors) needs to be developed to increase the probability that edge-sensitive and mature forest specialist taxa will be conserved.

Methodology:

Extensive pitfall trapping using replicated transects at four sites was employed to compare the beetle fauna between five habitats: young logging regeneration, the interior of upslope mature forest, the riparian-upslope transition in mature forest interior, and across coupe edges (both into upslope mature forest and into streamside reserves). Data screening ensured that the primary transect design, which employed traps positioned at unequal distances within transects, was unlikely to produce patterning in beetle distributions attributable to spatial autocorrelation or pitfall trap depletion.

A second survey compared beetles between logging regeneration, upslope mature forest interior, mature forest interior riparian areas, and streamside reserves that had been logged on both sides, in five stands of each of the four habitats.

Datasets:

None available.

Publications:

Baker, S.C. & Barmuta, L.A., (2006). Evaluating spatial autocorrelation and depletion in pitfall-trap studies of environmental gradients.Journal of Insect Conservation 10: 269-276.

Baker, S.C. (2006). Ecology and conservation of ground-dwelling beetles in managed wet eucalypt forest: edge and riparian effects. PhD thesis, University of Tasmania, Hobart.

Baker, S.C. (2006). A comparison of litter beetle assemblages (Coleoptera) in mature and recently clearfelled Eucalyptus obliqua forest. Australian Journal of Entomology 45: 130-136.

Baker, S.C., Richardson, A.M.M., Barmuta, L.A. & Thomson, R. (2006). Why conservation reserves should not always be concentrated in riparian areas: a study of ground-dwelling beetles in wet eucalypt forest. Biological Conservation 133: 156-168.

Baker, S.C., Barmuta, L.A., McQuillan, P.B. & Richardson, A.M.M. (2007). Estimating edge effects on ground-dwelling beetles at clearfelled non-riparian stand edges in Tasmanian wet eucalypt forest. Forest Ecology and Management 239: 92-101.

Baker, S.C., Richardson, A.M.M. & Barmuta, L.A. (2007). Site effects outweigh riparian influences on ground-dwelling beetles adjacent to first order streams in wet eucalypt forest. Biodiversity & Conservation 16: 1999-2014.

Baker, S.C., Barmuta, L.A. & Richardson, A.M.M. (2009). Response of ground-dwelling beetles across logging coupe edges into streamside reserves. Australian Journal of Entomology 48: 194-203.

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