Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK.
Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK.
Curr Biol. 2021 Mar 22;31(6):1284-1293.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.12.030. Epub 2021 Jan 21.
Effectively managing farming to meet food demand is vital for the future of biodiversity. Increasing yields on existing farmland can allow the abandonment (sparing) of low-yielding areas that subsequently recover as secondary forest. A key question is whether such "secondary sparing" conserves biodiversity more effectively than retaining wildlife-friendly habitat within farmland ("land sharing"). Focusing on the Colombian Choco-Andes, a global hotspot of threatened biodiversity, and on cattle farming, we examined the outcomes of secondary sparing and land sharing via simulated scenarios that maintained constant landscape-wide production and equal within-pasture yield: (1) for species and functional diversity of dung beetles and birds; (2) for avian phylogenetic diversity; and (3) across different stages of secondary forest regeneration, relative to spared primary forests. Sparing older secondary forests (15-30 years recovery) promotes substantial species, functional, and phylogenetic (birds only) diversity benefits for birds and dung beetles compared to land sharing. Species of conservation concern had higher occupancy estimates under land-sparing compared to land-sharing scenarios. Spared secondary forests accumulated equivalent diversity to primary forests for dung beetles within 15 years and within 15-30 years for birds, highlighting the need for longer term protection to maximize the biodiversity gains of secondary sparing. Promoting the recovery and protection of large expanses of secondary forests under the land-sparing model provides a critical mechanism for protecting tropical biodiversity, with important implications for concurrently assisting in the delivery of global targets to restore 350 million hectares of forested landscapes..
有效管理农业以满足粮食需求对生物多样性的未来至关重要。提高现有农田的产量可以允许放弃(节约)低产地区,这些地区随后会恢复为次生林。一个关键问题是,这种“次生节约”是否比在农田内保留有利于野生动物的栖息地(“土地共享”)更有效地保护生物多样性。我们专注于哥伦比亚的 Choco-Andes,这是一个全球生物多样性受到威胁的热点地区,以及养牛业,通过维持景观范围内恒定产量和相同牧场内产量的模拟情景,研究了次生节约和土地共享的结果:(1)对粪便甲虫和鸟类的物种和功能多样性;(2)对鸟类的系统发育多样性;(3)与节约的原始森林相比,在次生林不同的再生阶段。与土地共享相比,节约较老的次生林(15-30 年恢复)可促进鸟类和粪便甲虫的物种、功能和系统发育(仅鸟类)多样性得到实质性的提高。与土地共享相比,受保护关注的物种在土地节约情景下的占有估计更高。对于粪便甲虫,节约的次生林在 15 年内积累的多样性与原始森林相当,对于鸟类则在 15-30 年内积累的多样性与原始森林相当,这突出了需要更长期的保护以最大限度地提高次生节约的生物多样性收益。在土地节约模式下促进大面积次生林的恢复和保护为保护热带生物多样性提供了一个关键机制,对同时协助实现恢复 3.5 亿公顷森林景观的全球目标具有重要意义。