Ocampo-Ariza Carolina, Vansynghel Justine, Bertleff Denise, Maas Bea, Schumacher Nils, Ulloque-Samatelo Carlos, Yovera Fredy F, Thomas Evert, Steffan-Dewenter Ingolf, Tscharntke Teja
Functional Agrobiodiversity and Agroecology, University of Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany.
Bioversity International, Office for the Americas, Lima, Peru.
Ecol Appl. 2023 Jul;33(5):e2886. doi: 10.1002/eap.2886. Epub 2023 May 22.
Bird- and bat-mediated biocontrol benefits the productivity of tropical commodity crops such as cacao, but the ecological interactions driving these ecosystem services remain poorly understood. Whereas birds and bats prey on herbivorous arthropods, they may also prey on arthropod mesopredators such as ants, with poorly understood consequences for pest biocontrol. We used a full-factorial experiment excluding birds, bats, and ants to assess their effects on (a) the abundance of multiple arthropod groups; (b) predation pressure on arthropods evaluated through artificial sentinel caterpillars; and (c) cacao yield over 1 year in shaded agroforestry systems of native cacao varieties in Peru. Birds and bats increased cacao yield by 118%, which translates in smallholder benefits of ca. US $959 ha year . Birds and bats decreased predation by ants and other arthropods, but contributed to the control of phytophagous taxa such as aphids and mealybugs. By contrast, ant presence increased the abundance of these sap-sucking insects, with negative impacts for cacao yield. Notably, high abundances of the dominant ant Nylanderia sp., known to attend sap-sucking insects, were associated with lower cacao yield along a distance gradient from the closest forest edge. According to these results, arthropod predation by birds and bats, rather than mesopredation by arthropods, was most responsible for increases in cacao yield. Moving forward, detailed research about their trophic interactions will be necessary to identify the cause of such benefits. Retaining and restoring the large benefits of birds and bats as well as minimizing disservices by other taxa in cacao agroforests can benefit from management schemes that prioritize preservation of shade trees and adjacent forests within agroforestry landscapes.
鸟类和蝙蝠介导的生物防治有利于可可等热带经济作物的产量,但驱动这些生态系统服务的生态相互作用仍知之甚少。虽然鸟类和蝙蝠捕食食草节肢动物,但它们也可能捕食蚂蚁等节肢动物中捕食者,对害虫生物防治的影响尚不清楚。我们通过一项全因子实验,排除鸟类、蝙蝠和蚂蚁,以评估它们对(a)多个节肢动物类群的丰度;(b)通过人工哨兵毛虫评估的节肢动物捕食压力;以及(c)秘鲁本土可可品种遮荫农林业系统中1年的可可产量的影响。鸟类和蝙蝠使可可产量提高了118%,这为小农户带来了约每公顷每年959美元的收益。鸟类和蝙蝠减少了蚂蚁和其他节肢动物的捕食,但有助于控制蚜虫和粉虱等植食性类群。相比之下,蚂蚁的存在增加了这些吸食汁液昆虫的数量,对可可产量产生负面影响。值得注意的是,已知会照料吸食汁液昆虫的优势蚂蚁尼氏蚁属的高丰度,与离最近森林边缘的距离梯度上较低的可可产量相关。根据这些结果,鸟类和蝙蝠对节肢动物的捕食,而非节肢动物的中间捕食,是可可产量增加的主要原因。展望未来,有必要对它们的营养相互作用进行详细研究,以确定这种益处的原因。在可可农林业中,保留和恢复鸟类和蝙蝠的巨大益处,并尽量减少其他类群的危害,可以受益于优先保护农林业景观中的遮荫树和邻近森林的管理方案。