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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Specialist butterflies benefit most from the ecological restoration of mires
Norbertas NoreikaD. Johan KotzeNiina SormunenJouni PenttinenAnna VuoriOlli J. LoukolaJussi PäivinenPekka PunttilaJanne S. Kotiahosubject
0106 biological sciencesBoloria aquilonarista1172BiodiversityGeneralist and specialist species010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesspecialist speciesMireRestoration ecologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationbiologyEcologypeatland restoration010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyfungiPlant community15. Life on landbiology.organism_classificationBACI-designbiotic homogenizationHabitatButterflyta1181butterfly communitiesdrainage for forestrydescription
Abstract Anthropogenic disturbances cause biotic homogenization through the replacement of specialist species with generalists. Restoration has the potential to counteract these negative effects. Recently, restoration in the peatlands of Northern Europe has started to show positive effects on biodiversity. However, seldom have studies evaluated the response of insects to restoration by comparing populations prior to restoration to those thereafter with a Before-After Control-Impact (BACI) design. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether the restoration actions taken were appropriate to facilitate the successful recolonization of mire butterflies and plants. We found that, generally, drainage was negatively associated with mire specialist butterfly species and butterfly and plant communities, while generalist butterflies were not or were positively associated with drainage. In addition, mire specialist butterflies responded negatively to environmental variables associated with drained mires (number of tall trees) and positively to pristine mire-associated variables (larval food plant cover, number of low trees). Although restoration had a significantly positive effect on only two mire specialist butterflies ( Boloria aquilonaris , Colias palaeno ), it had a significantly positive effect on overall specialist species abundance. Furthermore, the structure of the butterfly and plant communities in restored sites became more similar to pristine sites a few years after restoration. We conclude that the restoration actions taken (removing tall trees but leaving smaller trees, and raising the water table level) are appropriate in creating suitable habitat conditions for mire butterflies. Finally, appropriate restoration actions in well-prioritized locations can reverse the trend of biotic homogenization.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-04-01 | Biological Conservation |