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Residual effects of thinning and high white-tailed deer densities on northern redback salamanders in southern New England oak forests
被引:25
作者:
Brooks, RT
[1
]
机构:
[1] Univ Massachusetts, NE Res Stn, US Forest Serv, Amherst, MA 01003 USA
关键词:
commercial thinning;
cover cover-board survey;
mixed oak-hardwood forest;
Plethodon cinereus;
red-back salamander;
southern New England;
D O I:
10.2307/3802835
中图分类号:
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号:
071012 ;
0713 ;
摘要:
Research has demonstrated that even-aged regeneration harvests, especially clearcutting, can have a major and long-lasting detrimental effect on forest amphibians, but the effects of less intensive silvicultural treatments have not been well documented. Additionally the chronic overabundance of white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) has become a problem in many parts of North America, with associated effects on vegetation composition and structure and on ether wildlife. I assessed the effects of crown thinning and deer overabundance on the relative abundance of forest-floor salamanders in a southern New England mixed oak-hardwood forest. I surveyed salamanders by using cover boards in 16 forest stands with thinned or unthinned treatments and with histories of low (3-6 deer/km(2)) or high (10-17 deer/km(2)) deer densities. Surveys were conducted 5 times a year for 3 years. Northern redbacks salamanders (Pedthodon cinerus) were the dominate species in all surveys and in all treatment classes. Redbacks were most abundant in spring and fall surveys and in the second and third lear of the study Neither thinning nor white-tailed deer density had a significant effect on the number of redback observations: stands with high numbers of redbacks occurred in all treatment classes. At the stand level, numbers of redback observations were positively correlated with the number of pieces and area of coarse woody debris and with the density of tall (greater than or equal to 1 m) woody stems. The study suggests that 3 stand disturbance, where a large percentage of the canopy is retained and that results in an increase in cover of understory vegetation, would result in no long-term effect on forest-floor salamanders.
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页码:1172 / 1180
页数:9
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