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Forest Indicator Species Correlate Only Weakly with Richness of Red-Listed Species and Perform Poorly Compared to Simple Stand Variables

Proceedings of the 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology(2018)

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摘要
the number of red-listed species. Our study, involving a large number of forest stands covering a wide gradient of forest characteristics, showed that indicator species commonly used in forest conservation planning do indicate red-listed species, at least to some extent: When considering stands of all ages, the presence of signal species was associated with higher richness of red-listed species, and the number of signal species correlated positively with that of red-listed species. However, when restricting the analyses to older forests, we could not detect any correlation between signal species and the richness of red-listed species. When we included information on forest structure in the analyses we found that, for predicting the richness of red-listed species across all of our study stands, the amount of coarse woody debris and stand age were much better predictors than the presence-absence or number of signal species. Moreover, adding information about signal species to models based on these forest variables did not bring any substantial improvements to our capacity to predict the number of red-listed species. This suggests that – in this particular setting – information about signal species does not contribute with information about red-listed species beyond that already derivable from forest stand measurements.
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