Abstract

Climate change accompanied by altered natural disturbance regimes threatens the resilience of boreal and hemiboreal forests. Bryophytes, an important part of plant biomass and diversity, fulfill numerous important functions in forests, thus markedly contributing to the resilience of these ecosystems. We studied abundance, richness, diversity and community composition of bryophyte species 20–21 years after wind disturbance in moderately damaged, heavily damaged and heavily damaged and subsequently salvage-logged stands; overmature forest stands with similar tree species composition were included in the study as a reference group. The community characteristics were linked with treatment and accompanying environmental variables. Altogether, 108 bryophyte taxa (81 mosses and 27 liverworts) were identified in study plots. We found that bryophytes responded to windthrow severity level and salvage logging in terms of species richness, diversity, and composition; diversity of microhabitats was the most important environmental variable explaining the variation in diversity metrics. Besides exhibiting greater overall species richness, uncleared wind-disturbed plots contained more bryophyte species with high conservational value as well, compared to salvage-logged and control plots. The largest number of bryophyte taxa was associated with deadwood substrates. Ordination analysis further emphasized the importance of deadwood substrate for liverworts. In order to fulfill the objective of biodiversity conservation, wind-disturbed forests should be left to recover naturally, to ensure a favorable status of all naturally occurring species and to improve the status of endangered and rare species. Retaining a proportion of surviving and/or wind-damaged trees while salvaging might also alleviate the unfavorable environmental conditions for bryophyte species while “lifeboating” some species through the following successional stages.

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