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Grassy margins along organically managed cereal fields foster trait diversity and taxonomic distinctness of arthropod communities

Birkhofer, Klaus LU ; Wolters, Volkmar and Diekoetter, Tim (2014) In Insect Conservation and Diversity 7(3). p.274-287
Abstract
It is not known if grassy margins contribute to the conservation of biodiversity if situated along organically managed cereal fields as the contrast in environmental conditions between fields and margins may be too small in absence of pesticide applications. Communities of spiders, ground beetles, true bugs and aphids were sampled in 2years along transects from the centre of organically managed cereal fields into adjacent grassy margins. Based on species richness, abundances, ecological and body size traits of species and taxonomic distinctness between species, communities were compared between organically managed cereal fields and their grassy margins. The species richness, abundance and variation in taxonomic distinctness of true bugs... (More)
It is not known if grassy margins contribute to the conservation of biodiversity if situated along organically managed cereal fields as the contrast in environmental conditions between fields and margins may be too small in absence of pesticide applications. Communities of spiders, ground beetles, true bugs and aphids were sampled in 2years along transects from the centre of organically managed cereal fields into adjacent grassy margins. Based on species richness, abundances, ecological and body size traits of species and taxonomic distinctness between species, communities were compared between organically managed cereal fields and their grassy margins. The species richness, abundance and variation in taxonomic distinctness of true bugs were significantly higher in grassy margins. For spiders and ground beetles, these metrics were either higher in cereal fields or did not differ significantly. At the species level, spiders living under stones or in soil crevices, as well as phytophagous ground beetles and true bugs that overwinter as eggs benefited from grassy margins. True bug communities in cereal fields were dominated by a few abundant species, whereas communities in margins were rather dominated by a few large species. Our comprehensive analyses highlight the importance of accounting for species identities and biology in biodiversity studies. The traits that characterised arthropod species that benefited from margins are not characteristic for pest species. Grassy margins along organic fields therefore represent an important agri-environmental scheme for the conservation of several arthropod taxa and margins should not be removed to increase the crop production area in organically managed cereal fields. (Less)
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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Agri-environmental scheme, Araneae, biodiversity, biomass, Carabidae, community composition, ecological traits, field margins, Heteroptera, organic farming
in
Insect Conservation and Diversity
volume
7
issue
3
pages
274 - 287
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • wos:000335471900008
  • scopus:84899888719
ISSN
1752-4598
DOI
10.1111/icad.12051
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
474ae1be-9e0f-4cb2-b635-b43a19a34ee1 (old id 4559150)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 10:28:05
date last changed
2022-04-20 02:28:21
@article{474ae1be-9e0f-4cb2-b635-b43a19a34ee1,
  abstract     = {{It is not known if grassy margins contribute to the conservation of biodiversity if situated along organically managed cereal fields as the contrast in environmental conditions between fields and margins may be too small in absence of pesticide applications. Communities of spiders, ground beetles, true bugs and aphids were sampled in 2years along transects from the centre of organically managed cereal fields into adjacent grassy margins. Based on species richness, abundances, ecological and body size traits of species and taxonomic distinctness between species, communities were compared between organically managed cereal fields and their grassy margins. The species richness, abundance and variation in taxonomic distinctness of true bugs were significantly higher in grassy margins. For spiders and ground beetles, these metrics were either higher in cereal fields or did not differ significantly. At the species level, spiders living under stones or in soil crevices, as well as phytophagous ground beetles and true bugs that overwinter as eggs benefited from grassy margins. True bug communities in cereal fields were dominated by a few abundant species, whereas communities in margins were rather dominated by a few large species. Our comprehensive analyses highlight the importance of accounting for species identities and biology in biodiversity studies. The traits that characterised arthropod species that benefited from margins are not characteristic for pest species. Grassy margins along organic fields therefore represent an important agri-environmental scheme for the conservation of several arthropod taxa and margins should not be removed to increase the crop production area in organically managed cereal fields.}},
  author       = {{Birkhofer, Klaus and Wolters, Volkmar and Diekoetter, Tim}},
  issn         = {{1752-4598}},
  keywords     = {{Agri-environmental scheme; Araneae; biodiversity; biomass; Carabidae; community composition; ecological traits; field margins; Heteroptera; organic farming}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{3}},
  pages        = {{274--287}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Insect Conservation and Diversity}},
  title        = {{Grassy margins along organically managed cereal fields foster trait diversity and taxonomic distinctness of arthropod communities}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/icad.12051}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/icad.12051}},
  volume       = {{7}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}