2018
DOI: 10.14214/df.267
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Harvested and burned forests as habitats for polypore fungi

Abstract: This thesis explores the effects of controlled burning and logging intensity on wood-decaying polypore fungi 10 years after the treatments. Intensive forest management, where most of the wood is removed from harvested sites, has resulted in many dead-wood-dependent species becoming Red-listed. The role that managed forests and novel, more biodiversity-oriented silviculture could play in safeguarding fungal diversity has remained largely unclear. This thesis is based on data sets collected from five years: 2000… Show more

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(1 citation statement)
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“…High retention is more beneficial for pine-forest polypores than low retention (50 vs. 10 m 3 ha −1 ; Suominen et al 2015, Table 2). Rare and red-listed polypores require long time to colonize substrate trees that die gradually due to wind impact, and indeed these species benefit from retention in the long term (Suominen 2018;Suominen et al 2018Suominen et al , 2019; however, such effect was not detected by .…”
Section: Long-term Responses To Retentionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…High retention is more beneficial for pine-forest polypores than low retention (50 vs. 10 m 3 ha −1 ; Suominen et al 2015, Table 2). Rare and red-listed polypores require long time to colonize substrate trees that die gradually due to wind impact, and indeed these species benefit from retention in the long term (Suominen 2018;Suominen et al 2018Suominen et al , 2019; however, such effect was not detected by .…”
Section: Long-term Responses To Retentionmentioning
confidence: 99%