Abstract
While the area of plantation forest increased globally between 2010 and 2015, more than twice the area of natural forests was lost over the same period (6.5 million ha natural forest lost per year versus 3.2 million ha plantation gained per year). Consequently, there is an increasing need to understand how plantation land use affects biodiversity. The relative conservation value of plantation forests is context dependent, being influenced by previous land use, management regimes and landscape composition. What is less well understood, and of importance to conservation management, is the consistency of diversity patterns across regions, and the degree to which useful generalisations can be provided within and among bioregions. Here, we analyse forest birds in Ireland, France and Portugal, representing distinct regions across the Atlantic biogeographic area of Europe. We compared taxonomic, functional and phylogenetic diversity of bird communities among conifer plantations and semi-natural oak forests, and assessed correlations between species traits and forest type across these regions. Although bird composition (assessed with NMDS ordination) differed consistently between plantation and oak forests across all three regions, species richness and Shannon diversity did not show a consistent pattern. In Ireland and France, metrics of taxonomic diversity (richness and Shannon diversity), functional diversity, functional dispersion and phylogenetic diversity were greater in oak forests than plantations. However, in Portugal taxonomic and phylogenetic diversity did not differ significantly between forest types, while functional diversity and dispersion were statistically significantly greater in plantations. No single bird trait-forest type association correlated in a consistent direction across the three study regions. Trait associations for the French bird communities appeared intermediate between those in Ireland and Portugal, and when trait correlations were significant in both Ireland and Portugal, the direction of the correlation was always opposite. The variation in response of bird communities to conifer plantations indicates that care is needed when generalising patterns of community diversity and assembly mechanisms across regions.
Highlights
The area of natural and semi-natural forests, decreased by 6.5 million hectares per year between 2010 and 2015 [1]
Data for each study region were originally collected as part of independent studies [13, 28, 29], for consistency among datasets we restricted the original datasets to only two forest types, extracting the data from closed-canopy monoculture stands composed of even-aged native and non-native conifer species, and from mature native semi-natural deciduous forests dominated by oak species
In Ireland, species richness and Shannon diversity were significantly lower in conifer plantations than in semi-natural oak forests, while bird communities were less functionally diverse and clustered in functional space (Functional diversity: W = 70, P
Summary
The area of natural and semi-natural forests (the latter being forests with predominantly natural characteristics but some human influence, such as historic management), decreased by 6.5 million hectares per year between 2010 and 2015 [1]. Plantation forests are typically subject to short to mid-rotation cycles involving the clearing of entire stands at coarse scales. These features contribute to generally lower vertical structure, from simpler canopies to reduced ground flora and understory [11,12,13]. These differences may be contextual and related to previous land use, plantation management and land use in adjacent plots, and may vary across scales [3, 14]
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