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Featured researches published by Alexandro B. Leverkus.


Ecological Applications | 2017

An ecosystem services approach to the ecological effects of salvage logging: valuation of seed dispersal

Alexandro B. Leverkus; Jorge Castro

Forest disturbances diminish ecosystem services and boost disservices. Because post-disturbance management intends to recover the greatest possible value, selling timber often prevails over other considerations. Ecological research has shown diverse effects of salvage logging, yet such research has focused on the biophysical component of post-disturbance ecosystems and lacks the link with human well-being. Here we bridge that gap under the ecosystem services framework by assessing the impact of post-fire management on a non-timber value. By employing the replacement cost method, we calculated the value of the post-fire natural regeneration of Holm oaks in southern Spain under three post-fire management options by considering the cost of planting instead. The value of this ecosystem service in non-intervention areas doubled that of salvage-logged stands due to the preference for standing dead trees by the main seed disperser. Still, most of the value resulted from the resprouting capacity of oaks. The value of this and other ecosystem services should be added to traditional cost/benefit analyses of post-disturbance management. We thus call for a more holistic approach to salvage logging research, one that explicitly links ecological processes with human well-being through ecosystem services, to better inform decision-makers on the outcomes of post-disturbance management.


Ecology | 2016

Shifting demographic conflicts across recruitment cohorts in a dynamic post‐disturbance landscape

Alexandro B. Leverkus; José María Rey Benayas; Jorge Castro

Seed dispersal effectiveness, which measures the number of adult plant individuals produced by seed dispersal, is the product of the number of seeds dispersed and the probability a seed produces an adult. Directed dispersal to certain habitat types may enhance some stages of recruitment but disfavor others, generating demographic conflicts in plant ontogeny. We asked whether temporal changes in habitat features may affect the distribution of seedlings recruited from dispersed acorns, and whether this could induce shifts in the life-stage conflicts experienced by successive cohorts of naturally recruited plants. As early successional habitats are characterized by rapid change, we used a burnt pine stand in southern Spain to monitor the recruitment and performance of a major tree species (Quercus ilex) across 7 yr in four types of post-fire habitats. These differed in structure and included patches of unburnt forest and three management alternatives of burnt trees: logging, partial cutting, and nonintervention. Young oaks that resprouted after the fire were mainly located near acorn sources, while new seedlings initially emerged mostly in habitats with standing snags due to habitat selection by European jays, Garrulus glandarius, for dispersal. The dead pines gradually collapsed and attracted less dispersal, so subsequent seedling cohorts mainly recruited within patches of unburnt pines. These live pines enhanced the survival of the oaks located beneath their canopy but greatly reduced their growth as compared to the other post-fire habitats, thus representing a demographic conflict that was absent elsewhere. As a consequence of the directional shift in the habitat where seedlings recruited, successive seedling cohorts experienced a gradual improvement in their likelihood of survival but a reduction in growth. The progressive intensification of this life-stage conflict hinged on the reduction of vertical structures in the habitat with standing burnt pines. Recruitment success thus involved temporal variation in the habitat where recruitment occurred, likely resulting from changes in the direction of seed dispersal, and spatial variation in habitat suitability for seedling establishment and growth. Temporal changes in habitat structure can indirectly change the environment in which recruitment occurs, and consequently seed dispersal effectiveness, by shifting the direction of seed dispersal.


Science | 2017

Mexico's logging threatens butterflies

Alexandro B. Leverkus; Pablo F. Jaramillo-López; Lincoln P. Brower; David B. Lindenmayer; Ernest H. Williams

Monarch butterflies ( Danaus plexippus ) conduct one of the most spectacular migrations in the animal kingdom. Across generations, populations move between their 3,375,000 km2 breeding range in the United States and Canada and the much smaller patch of forest in central Mexico where they spend the


Revista Ecosistemas | 2016

Regeneración post-incendio de la encina mediante procesos naturales y asistidos y valoración económica de los servicios ecosistémicos

Alexandro B. Leverkus

Puerta-Pinero, A. 2016. Identification and evaluation of afforestations through the Spanish National Forest Inventory. Ecosistemas 25(3): 43-50. Doi.: 10.7818/ECOS.2016.25-3.05 Afforestation programs in Spain were performed mainly between 1930-1970 decades. The study of the state and functioning of these anthropogenic forests has a wide debate among scientists and stakeholders. Forest inventories represent a crucial source of data to evaluate the long-term functioning of these forests at broad spatial scales. This article shows several tools to identify and select plots from the third Spanish Forest Inventory composed by uniform afforestations. The functions intend to facilitate the work of scientists and technicians whose objective could be influenced by the presence or absence of these artificial forest type. Those functions are a first attempt to include or exclude plots that are composed by artificially afforested forests. I also present some preliminary results, and discuss strengths, weaknesses and future directions relative to the use of these functions.


Journal of Environmental Management | 2014

Post-fire salvage logging alters species composition and reduces cover, richness, and diversity in Mediterranean plant communities

Alexandro B. Leverkus; Juan Lorite; Francisco Navarro; Enrique P. Sánchez-Cañete; Jorge Castro


Ecological Engineering | 2013

Suitability of the management of habitat complexity, acorn burial depth, and a chemical repellent for post-fire reforestation of oaks

Alexandro B. Leverkus; Jorge Castro; C. Puerta-Piñero; J.M. Rey Benayas


Journal of Applied Ecology | 2018

Impacts of salvage logging on biodiversity: A meta‐analysis

Simon Thorn; Claus Bässler; Roland Brandl; Philip J. Burton; Rebecca E. Cahall; John Campbell; Jorge Castro; Chang-Yong Choi; Tyler Cobb; Daniel C. Donato; Ewa Durska; Joseph B. Fontaine; Christian Hébert; Torsten Hothorn; Richard L. Hutto; E B Lee; Alexandro B. Leverkus; David B. Lindenmayer; Martin K. Obrist; Josep Rost; Sebastian Seibold; Rupert Seidl; Dominik Thom; Kaysandra Waldron; Beat Wermelinger; Maria-Barbara Winter; Michal Zmihorski; Jörg Müller


New Forests | 2012

Post-fire salvage logging increases restoration costs in a Mediterranean mountain ecosystem

Alexandro B. Leverkus; Carolina Puerta-Piñero; José Ramón Guzmán-Álvarez; Javier Navarro; Jorge Castro


Ecosphere | 2012

Post‐fire salvage logging alters a key plant‐animal interaction for forest regeneration

Jorge Castro; Carolina Puerta-Piñero; Alexandro B. Leverkus; Gregorio Moreno-Rueda; A. Sánchez-Miranda


Forest Ecology and Management | 2010

Management of burnt wood after fire affects post-dispersal acorn predation

Carolina Puerta-Piñero; A. Sánchez-Miranda; Alexandro B. Leverkus; J. Castro

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David B. Lindenmayer

Australian National University

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Simon Thorn

University of Würzburg

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Lena Gustafsson

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Claus Bässler

Bavarian Forest National Park

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