Dispersal ecology of deadwood organisms and connectivity conservation

Abstract
Limited knowledge of dispersal for most organisms hampers effective connectivity conservation in fragmented landscapes. In forest ecosystems, deadwood‐dependent organisms (i.e., saproxylics) are negatively affected by forest management and degradation globally. We reviewed empirically established dispersal ecology of saproxylic insects and fungi. We focused on direct studies (e.g., mark‐recapture, radiotelemetry), field experiments, and population genetic analyses. We found 2 somewhat opposite results. Based on direct methods and experiments, dispersal is limited to within a few kilometers, whereas genetic studies showed little genetic structure over tens of kilometers, which indicates long‐distance dispersal. The extent of direct dispersal studies and field experiments was small and thus these studies could not have detected long‐distance dispersal. Particularly for fungi, more studies at management‐relevant scales (1–10 km) are needed. Genetic researchers used outdated markers, investigated few loci, and faced the inherent difficulties of inferring dispersal from genetic population structure. Although there were systematic and species‐specific differences in dispersal ability (fungi are better dispersers than insects), it seems that for both groups colonization and establishment, not dispersal per se, are limiting their occurrence at management‐relevant scales. Because most studies were on forest landscapes in Europe, particularly the boreal region, more data are needed from nonforested landscapes in which fragmentation effects are likely to be more pronounced. Given the potential for long‐distance dispersal and the logical necessity of habitat area being a more fundamental landscape attribute than the spatial arrangement of habitat patches (i.e., connectivity sensu strict), retaining high‐quality deadwood habitat is more important for saproxylic insects and fungi than explicit connectivity conservation in many cases.
Main Authors
Format
Articles Review article
Published
2018
Series
Subjects
Publication in research information system
Publisher
Blackwell Scientific Publications
The permanent address of the publication
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-201806042995Use this for linking
Review status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0888-8892
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/cobi.13087
Language
English
Published in
Conservation Biology
Citation
  • Komonen, A., & Müller, J. (2018). Dispersal ecology of deadwood organisms and connectivity conservation. Conservation Biology, 32(3), 535-545. https://doi.org/10.1111/cobi.13087
License
In CopyrightOpen Access
Copyright© 2018 Society for Conservation Biology

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