Research article - Peer-reviewed, 2020
Crop diversity benefits carabid and pollinator communities in landscapes with semi-natural habitats
Aguilera, Guillermo; Roslin, Tomas; Miller, Kirsten; Tamburini, Giovanni; Birkhofer, Klaus; Caballero-Lopez, Berta; Lindstrom, Sandra Ann-Marie; Ockinger, Erik; Rundlof, Maj; Rusch, Adrien; Smith, Henrik G.; Bommarco, RiccardoAbstract
In agricultural landscapes, arthropods provide essential ecosystem services such as biological pest control and pollination. Intensified crop management practices and homogenization of landscapes have led to declines among such organisms. Semi-natural habitats, associated with high numbers of these organisms, are increasingly lost from agricultural landscapes but diversification by increasing crop diversity has been proposed as a way to reverse observed arthropod declines and thus restore ecosystem services. However, whether or not an increase in the diversity of crop types within a landscape promotes diversity and abundances of pollinating and predaceous arthropods, and how semi-natural habitats might modify this relationship, are not well understood. To test how crop diversity and the proportion of semi-natural habitats within a landscape are related to the diversity and abundance of beneficial arthropod communities, we collected primary data from seven studies focusing on natural enemies (carabids and spiders) and pollinators (bees and hoverflies) from 154 crop fields in Southern Sweden between 2007 and 2017. Crop diversity within a 1-km radius around each field was positively related to the Shannon diversity index of carabid and pollinator communities in landscapes rich in semi-natural habitats. Abundances were mainly affected by the proportion of semi-natural habitats in the landscape, with decreasing carabid and increasing pollinator numbers as the proportion of this habitat type increased. Spiders showed no response to either crop diversity or the proportion of semi-natural habitats. Synthesis and applications. We show that the joint effort of preserving semi-natural habitats and promoting crop diversity in agricultural landscapes is necessary to enhance communities of natural enemies and pollinators. Our results suggest that increasing the diversity of crop types can contribute to the conservation of service-providing arthropod communities, particularly if the diversification of crops targets complex landscapes with a high proportion of semi-natural habitats.Keywords
agricultural intensification; arable land; crop diversity; diversification; ecosystem services; landscape composition; pollination; predationPublished in
Journal of Applied Ecology2020, volume: 57, number: 11, pages: 2170-2179
Publisher: WILEY
Authors' information
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Ecology
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Ecology
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Ecology
University of Newcastle upon Tyne
Tamburini, Giovanni
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Ecology
Tamburini, Giovanni
University of Bari
Birkhofer, Klaus
Brandenburg Univ Technol Cottbus Senftenberg
Caballero-Lopez, Berta
Nat Sci Museum Barcelona
Lindström, Sandra
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Ecology
Lindström, Sandra
The Rural Economy and Agricultural Societies
Lindström, Sandra
Lund University
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Ecology
Rundlof, Maj
Lund Univ
Rusch, Adrien
Univ Bordeaux
Smith, Henrik G.
Lund Univ
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Ecology
Associated SLU-program
SLU Network Plant Protection
UKÄ Subject classification
Ecology
Publication Identifiers
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.13712
URI (permanent link to this page)
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/107333