Diversity and abundance of bryophytes, lichens, and fungi in relation to woody substrate and successional stage in aspen mixedwood boreal forests
- 1 April 1998
- journal article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Botany
- Vol. 76 (4) , 641-651
- https://doi.org/10.1139/b98-030
Abstract
We examined the effects of woody substrate and stand age on diversity and relative abundance of bryophytes, lichens, and fungi in trembling aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.) mixedwood boreal forests in Alberta. Point sampling was carried out on surfaces of downed woody material in young (23-26 years), mature (51-63 years), and old (122-146 years) aspen mixedwood stands. Downed woody material was categorized into one of seven decay stages. Diversity and relative abundance of bryophytes, lichens, and fungi were related to decay stage of the log and to stand age. Old aspen mixedwood stands had the highest nonvascular species richness and the greatest diversity of woody substrates in each of the decay stages. The seven decay stages shared many species. Species of bryophytes, lichens, and fungi on particular decay stages were different across the age-classes, indicating that time, as well as structural attributes, were important in determining species assemblages. These results suggest that both the presence of old aspen mixedwood stands and downed wood in different stages of decay are important to maintaining assemblages of bryophytes, lichens, and fungi.Key words: bryophytes, lichens, decay, aspen mixedwood, downed woody material.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Sixth Checklist of the Lichen-forming, Lichenicolous, and Allied Fungi of the Continental United States and CanadaThe Bryologist, 1995
- Threatened Plant, Animal, and Fungus Species in Swedish Forests: Distribution and Habitat AssociationsConservation Biology, 1994
- Lichen Diversity and Stand Continuity in the Northern Hardwoods and Spruce-Fir Forests of Northern New England and Western New BrunswickThe Bryologist, 1994
- Mass and nutrient content of woody debris and forest floor in western red cedar and western hemlock forests on northern Vancouver IslandCanadian Journal of Forest Research, 1993
- Semi-natural deciduous broadleaved woods in southern Sweden—habitat factors of importance to some bryophyte speciesBiological Conservation, 1992
- Differences in lichen and bryophyte communities between old-growth and managed second-growth forests in the Swan Valley, MontanaCanadian Journal of Botany, 1991
- Sequence of bryophytes and lichens in relation to substrate variables of decaying coniferous wood in Northern SwedenNordic Journal of Botany, 1988
- Habitat overlap/niche segregation in two Umbilicaria lichens: a possible mechanismOecologia, 1984
- DECAY OF TREMBLING ASPENCanadian Journal of Botany, 1958
- Plant Succession on Fallen Logs in a Virgin Spruce‐Fir ForestEcology, 1948