Advanced search
1 file | 3.24 MB Add to list
Author
Organization
Abstract
1. The species richness of vascular plants in forests can have contrasting effects on the occurrence of non-native insects. The establishment of non-native insect populations may be facilitated by low plant species richness, which reflects the availability of few but easily accessible resources, or hampered by high plant species richness due to spatial dilution of resources or biotic resistance (i.e., resistance against biological invasions). The relationship between the species richness of plants and non-native insects is likely influenced by disturbance regimes, which, in European forests, mostly consists of timber harvesting. We investigated this relationship considering two major forest attributes: (i) species richness of non-native vascular plants and (ii) forest management. 2. From 1101 forest plots in Europe, we gathered occurrences of 1212 vascular plant species, including 160 non-native species, and of 2404 beetle species, including 29 non-native species. We tested the relationship between the species richness of non-native beetles and plants using non-linear quantile regressions. We disentangled the effect of non-native plant species richness from that of management on the species richness of non-native beetles, while accounting for forest structural variables, using structural equation models. 3. We found clear evidence of a hump-shaped relationship between non-native beetle and plant species richness. The general shape of the relationship persisted when considering only woody or non-woody plants, as well as only non-native plants. The relationship was also similar between managed and unmanaged forests. However, the proportion of non-native beetles in managed forests was higher than in unmanaged forests at the same plant species richness. 4. Management had a direct negative effect on non-native beetle species richness, whereas non-native plant species richness had a direct positive effect. When considering all direct and indirect effects, management facilitated the occurrence of non-native beetles indirectly via non-native plants rather than directly. 5. Synthesis and applications. Species richness of native and non-native vascular plants modulates the species richness of non-native beetles through relationships with opposite signs. The interplay with management regimes and forest structures determines whether non-native beetles are promoted. Forest management aimed at reducing the intensity of disturbance while encouraging native plant species richness could promote the dominance of dilution effects and biotic resistance and could moderate the establishment of non-native insects.
Keywords
biodiversity, biological invasions, biotic resistance, Coleoptera, unmanaged forests, vascular plants, PLANTATION FORESTS, SPECIES-DIVERSITY, BIODIVERSITY, RESISTANCE, RICHNESS, INVASION, DEADWOOD, METAANALYSIS, EXTRAPOLATION, RAREFACTION

Downloads

  • (...).pdf
    • full text (Published version)
    • |
    • UGent only
    • |
    • PDF
    • |
    • 3.24 MB

Citation

Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:

MLA
Basile, Marco, et al. “Managed Forests Are a Stronghold of Non‐native Beetles in Europe.” JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2025, doi:10.1111/1365-2664.70033.
APA
Basile, M., Lachat, T., Balducci, L., Chianucci, F., Chojnacki, L., Archaux, F., … Brockerhoff, E. G. (2025). Managed forests are a stronghold of non‐native beetles in Europe. JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.70033
Chicago author-date
Basile, Marco, Thibault Lachat, Lorenzo Balducci, Francesco Chianucci, Lucas Chojnacki, Frédéric Archaux, Dimitrios Avtzis, et al. 2025. “Managed Forests Are a Stronghold of Non‐native Beetles in Europe.” JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.70033.
Chicago author-date (all authors)
Basile, Marco, Thibault Lachat, Lorenzo Balducci, Francesco Chianucci, Lucas Chojnacki, Frédéric Archaux, Dimitrios Avtzis, Christophe Bouget, Pallieter De Smedt, Inken Doerfler, Yann Dumas, Zoltán Elek, Marion Gosselin, Martin Gossner, Jacob Heilmann‐Clausen, Jeňýk Hofmeister, Jan Hošek, Philippe Janssen, Mathias Just Justesen, Aslak Kappel Hansen, Inger Kappel Schmidt, Sebastian Kepfer‐Rojas, Anders Mårell, Radim Matula, Jörg Müller, Björn Nordén, Péter Ódor, Yoan Paillet, Sonia Ravera, Tommaso Sitzia, Flóra Tinya, Sabina Burrascano, and Eckehard G. Brockerhoff. 2025. “Managed Forests Are a Stronghold of Non‐native Beetles in Europe.” JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY. doi:10.1111/1365-2664.70033.
Vancouver
1.
Basile M, Lachat T, Balducci L, Chianucci F, Chojnacki L, Archaux F, et al. Managed forests are a stronghold of non‐native beetles in Europe. JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY. 2025;
IEEE
[1]
M. Basile et al., “Managed forests are a stronghold of non‐native beetles in Europe,” JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2025.
@article{01JPSJ8NEQAKCMDDF9EGM2RZBM,
  abstract     = {{1. The species richness of vascular plants in forests can have contrasting effects on the occurrence of non-native insects. The establishment of non-native insect populations may be facilitated by low plant species richness, which reflects the availability of few but easily accessible resources, or hampered by high plant species richness due to spatial dilution of resources or biotic resistance (i.e., resistance against biological invasions). The relationship between the species richness of plants and non-native insects is likely influenced by disturbance regimes, which, in European forests, mostly consists of timber harvesting. We investigated this relationship considering two major forest attributes: (i) species richness of non-native vascular plants and (ii) forest management.
2. From 1101 forest plots in Europe, we gathered occurrences of 1212 vascular plant species, including 160 non-native species, and of 2404 beetle species, including 29 non-native species. We tested the relationship between the species richness of non-native beetles and plants using non-linear quantile regressions. We disentangled the effect of non-native plant species richness from that of management on the species richness of non-native beetles, while accounting for forest structural variables, using structural equation models.
3. We found clear evidence of a hump-shaped relationship between non-native beetle and plant species richness. The general shape of the relationship persisted when considering only woody or non-woody plants, as well as only non-native plants. The relationship was also similar between managed and unmanaged forests. However, the proportion of non-native beetles in managed forests was higher than in unmanaged forests at the same plant species richness.
4. Management had a direct negative effect on non-native beetle species richness, whereas non-native plant species richness had a direct positive effect. When considering all direct and indirect effects, management facilitated the occurrence of non-native beetles indirectly via non-native plants rather than directly.
5. Synthesis and applications. Species richness of native and non-native vascular plants modulates the species richness of non-native beetles through relationships with opposite signs. The interplay with management regimes and forest structures determines whether non-native beetles are promoted. Forest management aimed at reducing the intensity of disturbance while encouraging native plant species richness could promote the dominance of dilution effects and biotic resistance and could moderate the establishment of non-native insects.}},
  author       = {{Basile, Marco and Lachat, Thibault and Balducci, Lorenzo and Chianucci, Francesco and Chojnacki, Lucas and Archaux, Frédéric and Avtzis, Dimitrios and Bouget, Christophe and De Smedt, Pallieter and Doerfler, Inken and Dumas, Yann and Elek, Zoltán and Gosselin, Marion and Gossner, Martin and Heilmann‐Clausen, Jacob and Hofmeister, Jeňýk and Hošek, Jan and Janssen, Philippe and Just Justesen, Mathias and Hansen, Aslak Kappel and Schmidt, Inger Kappel and Kepfer‐Rojas, Sebastian and Mårell, Anders and Matula, Radim and Müller, Jörg and Nordén, Björn and Ódor, Péter and Paillet, Yoan and Ravera, Sonia and Sitzia, Tommaso and Tinya, Flóra and Burrascano, Sabina and Brockerhoff, Eckehard G.}},
  issn         = {{0021-8901}},
  journal      = {{JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY}},
  keywords     = {{biodiversity,biological invasions,biotic resistance,Coleoptera,unmanaged forests,vascular plants,PLANTATION FORESTS,SPECIES-DIVERSITY,BIODIVERSITY,RESISTANCE,RICHNESS,INVASION,DEADWOOD,METAANALYSIS,EXTRAPOLATION,RAREFACTION}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{15}},
  title        = {{Managed forests are a stronghold of non‐native beetles in Europe}},
  url          = {{http://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.70033}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}

Altmetric
View in Altmetric
Web of Science
Times cited: