Journal article
Authors list: Priyadarshana, Tharaka S.; Martin, Emily A.; Sirami, Clelia; Woodcock, Ben A.; Goodale, Eben; Martinez-Nunez, Carlos; Lee, Myung-Bok; Pagani-Nunez, Emilio; Raderschall, Chloe A.; Brotons, Lluis; Rege, Anushka; Ouin, Annie; Tscharntke, Teja; Slade, Eleanor M.
Publication year: 2024
Journal: Ecology Letters
Volume number: 27
Issue number: 3
ISSN: 1461-023X
eISSN: 1461-0248
Open access status: Green
DOI Link: https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.14412
Publisher: Wiley
Agricultural intensification not only increases food production but also drives widespread biodiversity decline. Increasing landscape heterogeneity has been suggested to increase biodiversity across habitats, while increasing crop heterogeneity may support biodiversity within agroecosystems. These spatial heterogeneity effects can be partitioned into compositional (land-cover type diversity) and configurational heterogeneity (land-cover type arrangement), measured either for the crop mosaic or across the landscape for both crops and semi-natural habitats. However, studies have reported mixed responses of biodiversity to increases in these heterogeneity components across taxa and contexts. Our meta-analysis covering 6397 fields across 122 studies conducted in Asia, Europe, North and South America reveals consistently positive effects of crop and landscape heterogeneity, as well as compositional and configurational heterogeneity for plant, invertebrate, vertebrate, pollinator and predator biodiversity. Vertebrates and plants benefit more from landscape heterogeneity, while invertebrates derive similar benefits from both crop and landscape heterogeneity. Pollinators benefit more from configurational heterogeneity, but predators favour compositional heterogeneity. These positive effects are consistent for invertebrates and vertebrates in both tropical/subtropical and temperate agroecosystems, and in annual and perennial cropping systems, and at small to large spatial scales. Our results suggest that promoting increased landscape heterogeneity by diversifying crops and semi-natural habitats, as suggested in the current UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration, is key for restoring biodiversity in agricultural landscapes. We demonstrate overall positive effects of crop and landscape compositional and configurational heterogeneity on alpha-level biodiversity (total abundance, species richness or Shannon diversity) for plants, invertebrates, vertebrates, pollinators and predators on a global scale. We also show that the positive effects of these heterogeneity components are consistent for invertebrates and vertebrates in both tropical/subtropical and temperate agroecosystems, and in annual and perennial cropping systems and at small to large spatial scales. These results suggest that small structural adjustments in compositional and configurational heterogeneity compatible with commercial farming systems (averaging 75% cropped area) can provide significant benefits for native biodiversity.image
Abstract:
Citation Styles
Harvard Citation style: Priyadarshana, T., Martin, E., Sirami, C., Woodcock, B., Goodale, E., Martinez-Nunez, C., et al. (2024) Crop and landscape heterogeneity increase biodiversity in agricultural landscapes: A global review and meta-analysis, Ecology Letters, 27(3), Article e14412. https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.14412
APA Citation style: Priyadarshana, T., Martin, E., Sirami, C., Woodcock, B., Goodale, E., Martinez-Nunez, C., Lee, M., Pagani-Nunez, E., Raderschall, C., Brotons, L., Rege, A., Ouin, A., Tscharntke, T., & Slade, E. (2024). Crop and landscape heterogeneity increase biodiversity in agricultural landscapes: A global review and meta-analysis. Ecology Letters. 27(3), Article e14412. https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.14412
Keywords
biodiversity-friendly farming; compositional and configurational heterogeneity; DIVERSIFIED FARMING SYSTEMS; FIELD MARGINS; HABITAT; landscape diversity; landscape ecology; predators