Importance of boreal forested wetlands for epiphytic macrolichen communities

Author:

Padgett Tegan11,Wiersma Yolanda F.11

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John’s, NL A1B 3X9, Canada.

Abstract

Forested wetlands provide ecosystem services and often support elevated levels of biodiversity and rare species. However, forested wetlands are understudied and face threats such as logging and land conversion. Epiphytic lichens are abundant in forested wetlands and may be useful to help delineate microhabitats across wetland–upland gradients. We investigated epiphytic macrolichen richness, diversity, and community composition in 15 sites in the Avalon Forest Ecoregion, Newfoundland, Canada. Within each site, we set up three parallel 40 m transects in (i) the forested wetland, (ii) the ecotone, and (iii) the upland forest. Along each transect, we selected five balsam fir (Abies balsamea (L.) Mill.) trees 10 m apart and surveyed for macrolichens on the lower bole. We collected data on tree height and tree diameter at breast height, which differed significantly among forest types. We also collected data on tree age and canopy cover, which did not differ significantly among forest types. Contrary to hypotheses suggesting that biodiversity is highest in ecotones, we found that mean macrolichen richness was significantly higher in wetlands, lower in the ecotones, and lowest in upland forests, and macrolichen diversity followed a similar pattern but with no significant difference among groups. Macrolichen community composition significantly differed among wetlands, ecotones, and upland forests. A lichen of conservation concern, Erioderma pedicellatum (Hue) P.M. Jørg., was detected primarily in forested wetlands, highlighting wetlands as key habitats for rare epiphytic macrolichens.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Ecology,Forestry,Global and Planetary Change

Reference52 articles.

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3. Berglund, H. 2004. Biodiversity in fragmented boreal forests — assessing the past, the present and the future. Doctoral thesis, Department of Ecology and Environmental Science, Umea University, Umea, Sweden.

4. Relative conservation value of Nova Scotia’s forests: forested wetlands as avian diversity hotspots

5. Brodo, I.M. 2016. Keys to lichens of North America. Yale University Press, New Haven and London.

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