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Habitat preferences and conservation of the Marbled Jewel Beetle Poecilonota variolosa (Buprestidae)

Åström, Maria ; Pettersson, Lars LU orcid ; Öckinger, Erik LU and Hedin, Jonas LU (2013) In Journal of Insect Conservation 17(6). p.1145-1154
Abstract
Detailed knowledge on habitat requirements is a key to successful conservation actions. The marbled jewel beetle Poecilonota variolosa (Buprestidae) has a wide global distribution but populations are often scarce and typically fragmented. In Sweden it is monophagous on aspen Populus tremula and is classified as near threatened on the Swedish Red List due to its rapid population decline. This study aimed to investigate habitat preferences and regional-scale distribution patterns of P. variolosa in southern Sweden in order to suggest conservation measures. Aspen trees in four study areas in the province of Småland were surveyed for exit holes during late summer 2011. The occurrence and number of exit holes (both new and old ones) per tree... (More)
Detailed knowledge on habitat requirements is a key to successful conservation actions. The marbled jewel beetle Poecilonota variolosa (Buprestidae) has a wide global distribution but populations are often scarce and typically fragmented. In Sweden it is monophagous on aspen Populus tremula and is classified as near threatened on the Swedish Red List due to its rapid population decline. This study aimed to investigate habitat preferences and regional-scale distribution patterns of P. variolosa in southern Sweden in order to suggest conservation measures. Aspen trees in four study areas in the province of Småland were surveyed for exit holes during late summer 2011. The occurrence and number of exit holes (both new and old ones) per tree were compared between study areas and habitat types, and were related to the sun exposure and bark thickness of individual trees. Further, the occurrence of new and older exit holes was related to tree sun exposure and bark thickness. The most preferred habitat types were aspens on clear-cuts, followed by roadside aspens, aspens in pastures, and aspens in closed forest. Thick bark and high sun exposure were consistently significant as predictors for both occurrence and number of new exit holes per tree. The majority of exit holes were located towards south. Our results indicate several useful management measures: to retain aspen on clear-cuts, to cut alongside roads and around some selected coarse aspens in closed forests and in pastures. (Less)
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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Coleoptera, Aspen, Populus tremula, Sun exposure, Bark thickness, Biotope, Forest management
in
Journal of Insect Conservation
volume
17
issue
6
pages
1145 - 1154
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • wos:000327897200007
  • scopus:84888844417
ISSN
1366-638X
DOI
10.1007/s10841-013-9595-3
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
675e2a56-b1b1-4f55-aa47-245196e9e5da (old id 4002727)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 10:11:32
date last changed
2024-01-06 10:12:20
@article{675e2a56-b1b1-4f55-aa47-245196e9e5da,
  abstract     = {{Detailed knowledge on habitat requirements is a key to successful conservation actions. The marbled jewel beetle Poecilonota variolosa (Buprestidae) has a wide global distribution but populations are often scarce and typically fragmented. In Sweden it is monophagous on aspen Populus tremula and is classified as near threatened on the Swedish Red List due to its rapid population decline. This study aimed to investigate habitat preferences and regional-scale distribution patterns of P. variolosa in southern Sweden in order to suggest conservation measures. Aspen trees in four study areas in the province of Småland were surveyed for exit holes during late summer 2011. The occurrence and number of exit holes (both new and old ones) per tree were compared between study areas and habitat types, and were related to the sun exposure and bark thickness of individual trees. Further, the occurrence of new and older exit holes was related to tree sun exposure and bark thickness. The most preferred habitat types were aspens on clear-cuts, followed by roadside aspens, aspens in pastures, and aspens in closed forest. Thick bark and high sun exposure were consistently significant as predictors for both occurrence and number of new exit holes per tree. The majority of exit holes were located towards south. Our results indicate several useful management measures: to retain aspen on clear-cuts, to cut alongside roads and around some selected coarse aspens in closed forests and in pastures.}},
  author       = {{Åström, Maria and Pettersson, Lars and Öckinger, Erik and Hedin, Jonas}},
  issn         = {{1366-638X}},
  keywords     = {{Coleoptera; Aspen; Populus tremula; Sun exposure; Bark thickness; Biotope; Forest management}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{6}},
  pages        = {{1145--1154}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Journal of Insect Conservation}},
  title        = {{Habitat preferences and conservation of the Marbled Jewel Beetle Poecilonota variolosa (Buprestidae)}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10841-013-9595-3}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/s10841-013-9595-3}},
  volume       = {{17}},
  year         = {{2013}},
}