Inconsistent responses of carabid beetles and spiders to land-use intensity and landscape complexity in north-western Europe

Reconciling biodiversity conservation with agricultural production requires a better understanding of how key ecosystem service providing species respond to agricultural intensification. Carabid beetles and spiders represent two widespread guilds providing biocontrol services. Here we surveyed carabid beetles and spiders in 66 winter wheat fields in four northwestern European countries and analyzed how the activity density and diversity of carabid beetles and spiders were related to crop yield (proxy for land-use intensity), percentage cropland (proxy for landscape complexity) and soil organic carbon content, and whether these patterns differed between dominant and non-dominant species. <17 % of carabid or spider species were classified as dominant, which accounted for >90 % of individuals respectively. We found that carabids and spiders were generally related to different aspects of agricultural intensification. Carabid species richness was positively related with crop yield and evenness was negatively related to crop cover. The activity density of non-dominant carabids was positively related with soil organic carbon content. Meanwhile, spider species richness and non-dominant spider species richness and activity density were all negatively related to percentage cropland. Our results show that practices targeted to enhance one functionally important guild may not promote another key guild, which helps explain why conservation measures to enhance natural enemies generally do not ultimately enhance pest regulation. Dominant and non-dominant species of both guilds showed mostly similar responses suggesting that management practices to enhance service provisioning by a certain guild can also enhance the overall diversity of that particular guild.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mei, Zulin, Scheper, Jeroen, Bommarco, Riccardo, de Groot, Gerard Arjen, Garratt, Michael P.D., Hedlund, Katarina, Potts, Simon G., Redlich, Sarah, Smith, Henrik G., Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf, van der Putten, Wim H., van Gils, Stijn, Kleijn, David
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Dominant species, Ecological intensification, Evenness, Natural enemies, Pest control service, Soil organic carbon,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/inconsistent-responses-of-carabid-beetles-and-spiders-to-land-use
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-615409
record_format koha
spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-6154092024-10-30 Mei, Zulin Scheper, Jeroen Bommarco, Riccardo de Groot, Gerard Arjen Garratt, Michael P.D. Hedlund, Katarina Potts, Simon G. Redlich, Sarah Smith, Henrik G. Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf van der Putten, Wim H. van Gils, Stijn Kleijn, David Article/Letter to editor Biological Conservation 283 (2023) ISSN: 0006-3207 Inconsistent responses of carabid beetles and spiders to land-use intensity and landscape complexity in north-western Europe 2023 Reconciling biodiversity conservation with agricultural production requires a better understanding of how key ecosystem service providing species respond to agricultural intensification. Carabid beetles and spiders represent two widespread guilds providing biocontrol services. Here we surveyed carabid beetles and spiders in 66 winter wheat fields in four northwestern European countries and analyzed how the activity density and diversity of carabid beetles and spiders were related to crop yield (proxy for land-use intensity), percentage cropland (proxy for landscape complexity) and soil organic carbon content, and whether these patterns differed between dominant and non-dominant species. <17 % of carabid or spider species were classified as dominant, which accounted for >90 % of individuals respectively. We found that carabids and spiders were generally related to different aspects of agricultural intensification. Carabid species richness was positively related with crop yield and evenness was negatively related to crop cover. The activity density of non-dominant carabids was positively related with soil organic carbon content. Meanwhile, spider species richness and non-dominant spider species richness and activity density were all negatively related to percentage cropland. Our results show that practices targeted to enhance one functionally important guild may not promote another key guild, which helps explain why conservation measures to enhance natural enemies generally do not ultimately enhance pest regulation. Dominant and non-dominant species of both guilds showed mostly similar responses suggesting that management practices to enhance service provisioning by a certain guild can also enhance the overall diversity of that particular guild. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/inconsistent-responses-of-carabid-beetles-and-spiders-to-land-use 10.1016/j.biocon.2023.110128 https://edepot.wur.nl/632092 Dominant species Ecological intensification Evenness Natural enemies Pest control service Soil organic carbon https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Dominant species
Ecological intensification
Evenness
Natural enemies
Pest control service
Soil organic carbon
Dominant species
Ecological intensification
Evenness
Natural enemies
Pest control service
Soil organic carbon
spellingShingle Dominant species
Ecological intensification
Evenness
Natural enemies
Pest control service
Soil organic carbon
Dominant species
Ecological intensification
Evenness
Natural enemies
Pest control service
Soil organic carbon
Mei, Zulin
Scheper, Jeroen
Bommarco, Riccardo
de Groot, Gerard Arjen
Garratt, Michael P.D.
Hedlund, Katarina
Potts, Simon G.
Redlich, Sarah
Smith, Henrik G.
Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf
van der Putten, Wim H.
van Gils, Stijn
Kleijn, David
Inconsistent responses of carabid beetles and spiders to land-use intensity and landscape complexity in north-western Europe
description Reconciling biodiversity conservation with agricultural production requires a better understanding of how key ecosystem service providing species respond to agricultural intensification. Carabid beetles and spiders represent two widespread guilds providing biocontrol services. Here we surveyed carabid beetles and spiders in 66 winter wheat fields in four northwestern European countries and analyzed how the activity density and diversity of carabid beetles and spiders were related to crop yield (proxy for land-use intensity), percentage cropland (proxy for landscape complexity) and soil organic carbon content, and whether these patterns differed between dominant and non-dominant species. <17 % of carabid or spider species were classified as dominant, which accounted for >90 % of individuals respectively. We found that carabids and spiders were generally related to different aspects of agricultural intensification. Carabid species richness was positively related with crop yield and evenness was negatively related to crop cover. The activity density of non-dominant carabids was positively related with soil organic carbon content. Meanwhile, spider species richness and non-dominant spider species richness and activity density were all negatively related to percentage cropland. Our results show that practices targeted to enhance one functionally important guild may not promote another key guild, which helps explain why conservation measures to enhance natural enemies generally do not ultimately enhance pest regulation. Dominant and non-dominant species of both guilds showed mostly similar responses suggesting that management practices to enhance service provisioning by a certain guild can also enhance the overall diversity of that particular guild.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Dominant species
Ecological intensification
Evenness
Natural enemies
Pest control service
Soil organic carbon
author Mei, Zulin
Scheper, Jeroen
Bommarco, Riccardo
de Groot, Gerard Arjen
Garratt, Michael P.D.
Hedlund, Katarina
Potts, Simon G.
Redlich, Sarah
Smith, Henrik G.
Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf
van der Putten, Wim H.
van Gils, Stijn
Kleijn, David
author_facet Mei, Zulin
Scheper, Jeroen
Bommarco, Riccardo
de Groot, Gerard Arjen
Garratt, Michael P.D.
Hedlund, Katarina
Potts, Simon G.
Redlich, Sarah
Smith, Henrik G.
Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf
van der Putten, Wim H.
van Gils, Stijn
Kleijn, David
author_sort Mei, Zulin
title Inconsistent responses of carabid beetles and spiders to land-use intensity and landscape complexity in north-western Europe
title_short Inconsistent responses of carabid beetles and spiders to land-use intensity and landscape complexity in north-western Europe
title_full Inconsistent responses of carabid beetles and spiders to land-use intensity and landscape complexity in north-western Europe
title_fullStr Inconsistent responses of carabid beetles and spiders to land-use intensity and landscape complexity in north-western Europe
title_full_unstemmed Inconsistent responses of carabid beetles and spiders to land-use intensity and landscape complexity in north-western Europe
title_sort inconsistent responses of carabid beetles and spiders to land-use intensity and landscape complexity in north-western europe
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/inconsistent-responses-of-carabid-beetles-and-spiders-to-land-use
work_keys_str_mv AT meizulin inconsistentresponsesofcarabidbeetlesandspiderstolanduseintensityandlandscapecomplexityinnorthwesterneurope
AT scheperjeroen inconsistentresponsesofcarabidbeetlesandspiderstolanduseintensityandlandscapecomplexityinnorthwesterneurope
AT bommarcoriccardo inconsistentresponsesofcarabidbeetlesandspiderstolanduseintensityandlandscapecomplexityinnorthwesterneurope
AT degrootgerardarjen inconsistentresponsesofcarabidbeetlesandspiderstolanduseintensityandlandscapecomplexityinnorthwesterneurope
AT garrattmichaelpd inconsistentresponsesofcarabidbeetlesandspiderstolanduseintensityandlandscapecomplexityinnorthwesterneurope
AT hedlundkatarina inconsistentresponsesofcarabidbeetlesandspiderstolanduseintensityandlandscapecomplexityinnorthwesterneurope
AT pottssimong inconsistentresponsesofcarabidbeetlesandspiderstolanduseintensityandlandscapecomplexityinnorthwesterneurope
AT redlichsarah inconsistentresponsesofcarabidbeetlesandspiderstolanduseintensityandlandscapecomplexityinnorthwesterneurope
AT smithhenrikg inconsistentresponsesofcarabidbeetlesandspiderstolanduseintensityandlandscapecomplexityinnorthwesterneurope
AT steffandewenteringolf inconsistentresponsesofcarabidbeetlesandspiderstolanduseintensityandlandscapecomplexityinnorthwesterneurope
AT vanderputtenwimh inconsistentresponsesofcarabidbeetlesandspiderstolanduseintensityandlandscapecomplexityinnorthwesterneurope
AT vangilsstijn inconsistentresponsesofcarabidbeetlesandspiderstolanduseintensityandlandscapecomplexityinnorthwesterneurope
AT kleijndavid inconsistentresponsesofcarabidbeetlesandspiderstolanduseintensityandlandscapecomplexityinnorthwesterneurope
_version_ 1816151655827111936