Saproxylic beetle assemblages of three managed oak woodlands in the Eastern Mediterranean

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Saproxylic beetle assemblages of three managed oak woodlands in the Eastern Mediterranean. / Buse, Joern; Levanony, Tal; Timm, Anika et al.
In: Zoology in the Middle East, Vol. 45, No. 1, 01.01.2008, p. 55-66.

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@article{94498fd8b7924d33a6b9961cb976c667,
title = "Saproxylic beetle assemblages of three managed oak woodlands in the Eastern Mediterranean",
abstract = "Oak woodlands belong to the natural vegetation in most Mediterranean regions but have suffered from a long history of woodland devastation and overgrazing. The remaining woodlands have been managed in different ways, and we expected this to have effects on the fauna associated with trees. We investigated three different sites in the Eastern Mediterranean with flightinterception traps to analyse the impact of woodland management on dead wood and tree structures and the relevance for saproxylic beetle assemblages. Our results show significant differences in trunk diameter, stem density and dead wood diversity between the three sites. Old oaks in semiopen woodland are characterised by diverse stages of dead wood and harboured most saproxylic species (74 species out of a total of 98) and most individuals. With regard to rarefied species richness, we found that coppice woodland with a high stem density and medium-sized trees has the most diverse beetle assemblage (19.7 species per 100 individuals). Species richness was in general strongly associated with the diameter of the oaks, but, surprisingly, was also of the same level as species numbers reported from studies in Central Europe. The large number of singletons, which made up 40 % of the entire sample, may indicate a considerable number of species that were not trapped. We discuss the impact of different management options on tree shape and woodland structure, issues which are also important for the saproxylic beetle assemblage associated with Mediterranean oaks. We conclude that oak woodlands in the Middle East – and especially those woodlands that have been used and managed in a sustainable way – represent a valuable resource for insect diversity.",
keywords = "Biology, Biodiversity, Dead wood, Israel, Mediterranean, Middle East, Palestine Oak, Quercus calliprinos, Woodland structure",
author = "Joern Buse and Tal Levanony and Anika Timm and Tamar Dayan and Thorsten A{\ss}mann",
year = "2008",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1080/09397140.2008.10638307",
language = "English",
volume = "45",
pages = "55--66",
journal = "Zoology in the Middle East",
issn = "0939-7140",
publisher = "MAX KASPAREK VERLAG",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Saproxylic beetle assemblages of three managed oak woodlands in the Eastern Mediterranean

AU - Buse, Joern

AU - Levanony, Tal

AU - Timm, Anika

AU - Dayan, Tamar

AU - Aßmann, Thorsten

PY - 2008/1/1

Y1 - 2008/1/1

N2 - Oak woodlands belong to the natural vegetation in most Mediterranean regions but have suffered from a long history of woodland devastation and overgrazing. The remaining woodlands have been managed in different ways, and we expected this to have effects on the fauna associated with trees. We investigated three different sites in the Eastern Mediterranean with flightinterception traps to analyse the impact of woodland management on dead wood and tree structures and the relevance for saproxylic beetle assemblages. Our results show significant differences in trunk diameter, stem density and dead wood diversity between the three sites. Old oaks in semiopen woodland are characterised by diverse stages of dead wood and harboured most saproxylic species (74 species out of a total of 98) and most individuals. With regard to rarefied species richness, we found that coppice woodland with a high stem density and medium-sized trees has the most diverse beetle assemblage (19.7 species per 100 individuals). Species richness was in general strongly associated with the diameter of the oaks, but, surprisingly, was also of the same level as species numbers reported from studies in Central Europe. The large number of singletons, which made up 40 % of the entire sample, may indicate a considerable number of species that were not trapped. We discuss the impact of different management options on tree shape and woodland structure, issues which are also important for the saproxylic beetle assemblage associated with Mediterranean oaks. We conclude that oak woodlands in the Middle East – and especially those woodlands that have been used and managed in a sustainable way – represent a valuable resource for insect diversity.

AB - Oak woodlands belong to the natural vegetation in most Mediterranean regions but have suffered from a long history of woodland devastation and overgrazing. The remaining woodlands have been managed in different ways, and we expected this to have effects on the fauna associated with trees. We investigated three different sites in the Eastern Mediterranean with flightinterception traps to analyse the impact of woodland management on dead wood and tree structures and the relevance for saproxylic beetle assemblages. Our results show significant differences in trunk diameter, stem density and dead wood diversity between the three sites. Old oaks in semiopen woodland are characterised by diverse stages of dead wood and harboured most saproxylic species (74 species out of a total of 98) and most individuals. With regard to rarefied species richness, we found that coppice woodland with a high stem density and medium-sized trees has the most diverse beetle assemblage (19.7 species per 100 individuals). Species richness was in general strongly associated with the diameter of the oaks, but, surprisingly, was also of the same level as species numbers reported from studies in Central Europe. The large number of singletons, which made up 40 % of the entire sample, may indicate a considerable number of species that were not trapped. We discuss the impact of different management options on tree shape and woodland structure, issues which are also important for the saproxylic beetle assemblage associated with Mediterranean oaks. We conclude that oak woodlands in the Middle East – and especially those woodlands that have been used and managed in a sustainable way – represent a valuable resource for insect diversity.

KW - Biology

KW - Biodiversity

KW - Dead wood

KW - Israel

KW - Mediterranean

KW - Middle East

KW - Palestine Oak

KW - Quercus calliprinos

KW - Woodland structure

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=58249138463&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1080/09397140.2008.10638307

DO - 10.1080/09397140.2008.10638307

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 45

SP - 55

EP - 66

JO - Zoology in the Middle East

JF - Zoology in the Middle East

SN - 0939-7140

IS - 1

ER -