Abstract
Abstract We evaluated the effect of four different forest management techniques, unthinned control and three thinning intensities (light, light with gaps, and heavy thin), on arthropod abundance, diversity, and community structure as an indicator of ecological processes affecting other forest fauna. Ground-dwelling arthropods were collected during 2000–2001, with pitfall traps in June (warm-wet season) and August (hot-dry season) 5 yr after a thinning treatment in 40- to 60-yr-old Douglas fir [Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco] trees in the Willamette National Forest. We found arthropod abundance and diversity was higher in heavy and light/gap thinning treatments than the other treatments. Additionally, four groups (ants, spiders, camel-crickets, and millipedes) preferred the more intense thinning treatment areas. The abundance of carabids, the third most abundant group, was higher at the unthinned control than any thinning treatment during the wet season, but not during the dry season. Although the im...
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