Organic Farming: Biodiversity Impacts Can Depend on Dispersal Characteristics and Landscape Context
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2015
Abstract:
Organic farming, a low intensity system, may offer benefits for a range of taxa, but what
affects the extent of those benefits is imperfectly understood.We explored the effects of
organic farming and landscape on the activity density and species density of spiders and
carabid beetles, using a large sample of paired organic and conventional farms in the UK.
Spider activity density and species density were influenced by both farming system and surrounding
landscape. Hunting spiders, which tend to have lower dispersal capabilities, had
higher activity density, and more species were captured, on organic compared to conventional
farms. There was also evidence for an interaction, as the farming system effect was
particularly marked in the cropped area before harvest and was more pronounced in complex
landscapes (those with little arable land). There was no evidence for any effect of farming
system or landscape on web-building spiders (which include the linyphiids, many of
which have high dispersal capabilities). For carabid beetles, the farming system effects
were inconsistent. Before harvest, higher activity densities were observed in the crops on
organic farms compared with conventional farms. After harvest, no difference was detected
in the cropped area, but more carabids were captured on conventional compared to organic
boundaries. Carabids were more species-dense in complex landscapes, and farming system
did not affect this. There was little evidence that non-cropped habitat differences
explained the farming system effects for either spiders or carabid beetles. For spiders, the
farming system effects in the cropped area were probably largely attributable to differences
in crop management; reduced inputs of pesticides (herbicides and insecticides) and fertilisers
are possible influences, and there was some evidence for an effect of non-crop plant species richness on hunting spider activity density. The benefits of organic farming may be
greatest for taxa with lower dispersal abilities generally. The evidence for interactions
among landscape and farming system in their effects on spiders highlights the importance
of developing strategies for managing farmland at the landscape-scale for most effective
conservation of biodiversity.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Elenco autori:
Feber, Ruth E.; Johnson, Paul J.; Bell, James R.; Chamberlain, Daniel E.; Firbank, Leslie G.; Fuller, Robert J.; Manley, Will; Mathews, Fiona; Norton, Lisa R.; Townsend, Martin; Macdonald, David W.
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