“…Consequently, different taxonomic groups in different types of natural disturbances may respond differently to salvage logging (Zmihorski & Durska, ). Numerous studies have focused on the effects of salvage logging after natural disturbances on species richness and the community composition of various taxa such as vascular plants (Blair, McBurney, Blanchard, Banks, & Lindenmayer, ; Macdonald, ; Stuart, Grifantini, Fox, & Fox, ), carabids (Cobb, Langor, & Spence, ; Koivula & Spence, ; Phillips, Cobb, Spence, & Brigham, ), birds (Castro, Moreno‐Rueda, & Hódar, ; Choi, Lee, Nam, Lee, & Lim, ; Nappi & Drapeau, ; Saab, Russell, & Dudley, ; Thorn, Werner, et al., ; Zmihorski, ), and saproxylic organisms (i.e. those depending on dead wood during some part of their life cycles; Cobb et al., ; Norvez, Hébert, Bélanger, Hebert, & Belanger, ).…”