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Occupancy pattern of a long-horned beetle in a variegated forest landscape: linkages between tree quality and forest cover across spatial scales
Authors:Pablo M Vergara  Luis O Meneses  Audrey A Grez  Madelaine S Quiroz  Gerardo E Soto  Christian G Pérez-Hernández  Paola A Diaz  Ingo J Hahn  Andrés Fierro
Institution:1.Laboratorio de Ecología y Conservación, Departamento de Gestión Agraria,Universidad de Santiago de Chile,Santiago,Chile;2.Facultad Ciencias Veterinarias y Pecuarias,Universidad de Chile,Santiago,Chile;3.Cornell Lab of Ornithology and Department of Natural Resources,Cornell University,Ithaca,USA;4.Department of Geo-information,Munich University of Applied Sciences,Munich,Germany
Abstract:

Context

Interactions between landscape-scale processes and fine-grained habitat heterogeneity are usually invoked to explain species occupancy in fragmented landscapes. In variegated landscapes, however, organisms face continuous variation in micro-habitat features, which makes necessary to consider ecologically meaningful estimates of habitat quality at different spatial scales.

Objectives

We evaluated the spatial scales at which forest cover and tree quality make the greatest contribution to the occupancy of the long-horned beetle Microplophorus magellanicus (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) in a variegated forest landscape.

Methods

We used averaged data of tree quality (as derived from remote sensing estimates of the decay stage of single trees) and spatially independent pheromone-baited traps to model the occurrence probability as a function of multiple cross-scale combinations between forest cover and tree quality (with scales ranging between 50 and 400 m).

Results

Model support and performance increased monotonically with the increasing scale at which tree quality was measured. Forest cover was not significant, and did not exhibit scale-specific effects on the occurrence probability of M. magellanicus. The interactive effect between tree quality and forest cover was stronger than the independent (additive) effects of tree quality and particularly forest cover. Significant interactions included tree quality measured at spatial scales ≥200 m, but cross-scale interactions occurred only in four of the seven best-supported models.

Conclusions

M. magellanicus respond to the high-quality trees available in the landscape rather than to the amount of forest per se. Conservation of viable metapopulations of M. magellanicus should consider the quality of trees at spatial scales >200 m.
Keywords:
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