Journal ArticleParallel publicationPublished versionDOI: 10.48548/pubdata-3354

Forest Heterogeneity by Chain Saw: How Between‐Patch Variation in Old Growth Attributes Changes the Metacommunities of Beetles

Chronological data

Date of first publication2026-03-05
Date of publication in PubData 2026-04-15

Language of the resource

English

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Variant form of DOI: 10.1111/ele.70355
Mitesser, O., Cadotte, M. W., Mori, A. S., van der Plas, F., Chao, A., Rothacher, J., Bässler, C., Bevanda, M., Biedermann, P. H. W., Bradler, P., Castañeda‐Gómez, A., Decker, O., Delory, B. M., Dittrich, S., Feldhaar, H., Fichtner, A., Kreis, A., Köstler‐Albert, L., Lettenmaier, L., … Müller, J. (2026). Forest Heterogeneity by Chain Saw: How Between‐Patch Variation in Old Growth Attributes Changes the Metacommunities of Beetles. Ecology Letters, 29(3), Article e70355.
Published in ISSN: 1461-0248
Ecology Letters

Abstract

Metacommunity theory has expanded our understanding of how spatial dynamics and local interactions influence species communities. Different assembly archetypes, reflecting different roles of species differences, habitat differences, and dispersal have been described, but we lack empirical studies specifically in terrestrial habitats testing which archetype is most important. In a replicated design, we experimentally enhanced structural between‐patch heterogeneity in homogeneous production forests and developed a statistical framework controlling for sample incompleteness to detect different metacommunity processes. Meta‐analyses on > 100 K individuals of > 1.3 K beetle species showed an increase of ~60 species in heterogenized forests at γ‐level promoted by increasing α‐diversity consistent with the mass‐effect and an increase of β‐diversity by ~10% supporting species‐sorting . Additionally, we tested β‐deviations from random assembly as a proxy of neutral processes . Findings indicate that enhancing structural heterogeneity can shift forests from patch‐dynamics dominance towards mass‐effect and species‐sorting , offering a promising pathway to restore biodiversity in managed landscapes.

Keywords

Beetle; Coleoptera; Diversity; Metacommunity Paradigm; Temperate Forest

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Research