Soil Properties and Species Richness of Invertebrates on Afforested Sites after Brown Coal Mining

被引:46
作者
Hendrychova, Marketa [1 ]
Salek, Miroslav [1 ]
Tajovsky, Karel [2 ]
Rehor, Michal [3 ]
机构
[1] Czech Univ Life Sci Prague, Fac Environm Sci, CZ-16521 Prague 6, Czech Republic
[2] Acad Sci Czech Republ, Inst Soil Biol, Ctr Biol, CZ-37005 Ceske Budejovice, Czech Republic
[3] Brown Coal Res Inst, CZ-43401 Most, Czech Republic
关键词
biodiversity; forest reclamation; post-mining landscape; soil attributes; spontaneous succession; SPONTANEOUS SUCCESSION; RESTORATION; HABITATS; COMMUNITIES; LANDSCAPES; FAUNA; MINE; RECOLONIZATION; VEGETATION; FOREST;
D O I
10.1111/j.1526-100X.2011.00841.x
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Variation in soil properties may influence diversity of invertebrate communities, a crucial component of every ecosystem, and their impact should be considered also in restoration management. Although most spoil heaps have been reclaimed after brown coal mining, some post-mining sites are left to natural succession. Little is known, however, about the effects of these two fundamentally different approaches on diversity of invertebrates inhabiting these stands. While controlling for habitat characteristics, we analyzed the effects of soil properties on species richness of seven invertebrate groups representing various trophic levels and diverse spatial niches at afforested spoil heaps and adjacent pits managed under these two basic restoration approaches in the North Bohemia Brown Coal Basin (Czech Republic, central Europe). Forty-seven percentage of 140 invertebrate species occurred on both reclamations and successions, but many were found exclusively on successions (37%) or reclamations (16%). The species richness of various groups was affected by different soil properties either independently of other variables or in interaction with microclimatic conditions or management history. These results imply a need for diverse management approaches in post-mining areas to support the diversity of invertebrate communities. Technical reclamations with artificial plantations and spontaneous forest development on bare substrate (thus creating mosaics of open patches and afforested stands with different soil deposit materials) were found to be reasonable alternatives to support invertebrate richness on post-mining forested stands. We conclude that these two approaches should properly be combined in practice.
引用
收藏
页码:561 / 567
页数:7
相关论文
共 45 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 2008, J LANDSCAPE STUD
[2]   Terrestrial Insect Communities and the Restoration of an Industrially Perturbed Landscape: Assessing Success and Surrogacy [J].
Babin-Fenske, Jennifer ;
Anand, Madhur .
RESTORATION ECOLOGY, 2010, 18 :73-84
[3]   Diversity of surface dwelling beetle assemblages in open-cast lignite mines in Central Germany [J].
Brändle, M ;
Durka, W ;
Altmoos, M .
BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION, 2000, 9 (09) :1297-1311
[4]   Soil zoology I:: arthropod communities in open landscapes of former brown coal mining areas [J].
Bröring, U ;
Mrzljak, J ;
Niedringhaus, R ;
Wiegleb, G .
ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING, 2005, 24 (1-2) :121-133
[5]  
Cermak P., 2002, REKULTIVACE PLOCH DE
[6]  
Crawley M.J., 2002, STAT COMPUTING INTRO
[7]  
Dickinson C.H., 1974, BIOL PLANT LITTER DE
[8]   Development of soil fauna at mine sites during 46 years after afforestation [J].
Dunger, W ;
Wanner, M ;
Hauser, H ;
Hohberg, K ;
Schulz, HJ ;
Schwalbe, T ;
Seifert, B ;
Vogel, J ;
Voigtländer, K ;
Zimdars, B ;
Zulka, KP .
PEDOBIOLOGIA, 2001, 45 (03) :243-271
[9]   Beetles (Coleoptera) on brownfield sites in England: An important conservation resource? [J].
Eyre, M. D. ;
Luff, M. L. ;
Woodward, J. C. .
JOURNAL OF INSECT CONSERVATION, 2003, 7 (04) :223-231
[10]  
Farkac J., 2005, List of threatened species in Czech Republic, Invertebrates