Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment (SAGE), Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1710 University Ave, Madison, WI, 53726, USA.
DOE Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA.
Nat Commun. 2020 Sep 9;11(1):4295. doi: 10.1038/s41467-020-18045-z.
Recent expansion of croplands in the United States has caused widespread conversion of grasslands and other ecosystems with largely unknown consequences for agricultural production and the environment. Here we assess annual land use change 2008-16 and its impacts on crop yields and wildlife habitat. We find that croplands have expanded at a rate of over one million acres per year, and that 69.5% of new cropland areas produced yields below the national average, with a mean yield deficit of 6.5%. Observed conversion infringed upon high-quality habitat that, relative to unconverted land, had provided over three times higher milkweed stem densities in the Monarch butterfly Midwest summer breeding range and 37% more nesting opportunities per acre for waterfowl in the Prairie Pothole Region of the Northern Great Plains. Our findings demonstrate a pervasive pattern of encroachment into areas that are increasingly marginal for production, but highly significant for wildlife, and suggest that such tradeoffs may be further amplified by future cropland expansion.
近年来,美国耕地面积不断扩大,导致草原和其他生态系统大面积转变用途,这对农业生产和环境造成了广泛的未知影响。在这里,我们评估了 2008 年至 2016 年的年度土地利用变化及其对作物产量和野生动物栖息地的影响。我们发现,耕地每年以超过 100 万英亩的速度扩张,其中 69.5%的新耕地面积的产量低于全国平均水平,平均产量缺口为 6.5%。观察到的转变侵占了高质量的栖息地,与未转变的土地相比,中西部帝王蝶夏季繁殖地的乳草茎密度高出三倍以上,大平原草原区每英亩的筑巢机会增加了 37%。我们的研究结果表明,这种侵占现象普遍存在,逐渐侵占了对生产来说越来越边缘的地区,但对野生动物来说却非常重要,这表明未来耕地的扩张可能会进一步放大这种权衡。