Bucher Roman, Batáry Péter, Baudry Julia, Beaumelle Léa, Čerevková Andrea, de la Riva Enrique G, Dirilgen Tara, Gallé Róbert, Kesse-Guyot Emmanuelle, Rembiałkowska Ewa, Rusch Adrien, Stanley Dara A, Ulrich Werner, Birkhofer Klaus
Department of Ecology, Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus-Senftenberg, Cottbus, Germany.
'Lendület' Landscape and Conservation Ecology, Institute of Ecology and Botany, Centre for Ecological Research, Vácrátót, Hungary.
Ecol Appl. 2024 Dec;34(8):e3035. doi: 10.1002/eap.3035. Epub 2024 Oct 7.
Land-use intensification is often associated with a decline in functional diversity, potentially undermining the provision of ecosystem services. However, how changes in traits affect ecosystem processes remains poorly understood. Variation in trait values among species in a community may drive ecosystem processes. Alternatively, the mass ratio hypothesis proposes that trait values of the dominant species in a local community are related to ecosystem processes. Using data from 159 farms in six European countries, we quantified the impact of local and landscape-level land-use intensity on ground beetles as pest control agents. We then assessed the extent to which functional diversity and community-weighted mean trait values relate to pest control and cereal yield. In addition, we assessed how the responses to land use and the effects of different species on pest control and yield varied with their traits to compare the relative impact of the traits studied. Functional diversity of ground beetles improved aphid removal, but did not translate into higher crop yields. Pest control of aphids was enhanced by a higher proportion of smaller, mobile ground beetles with a preference for the vegetation layer. Smaller, predatory ground beetles in communities improved crop yield. The magnitude of responses to land-use intensification and the effects on pest control and yield were more strongly influenced by body size than other traits. Our study provides evidence that reduced management intensity can improve pest control by supporting small-sized, macropterous ground beetles. In contrast to the claims of ecological intensification, our joint analysis of the direct effects of land use on yield and indirect effects via functional diversity of ground beetles and pest control suggests that ecosystem services by ground beetles cannot compensate for the yield gap due to a reduction in land-use intensity.
土地利用集约化往往与功能多样性的下降相关联,这可能会破坏生态系统服务的提供。然而,性状变化如何影响生态系统过程仍知之甚少。群落中物种间性状值的差异可能会驱动生态系统过程。另外,质量比假说提出,当地群落中优势物种的性状值与生态系统过程相关。利用来自六个欧洲国家159个农场的数据,我们量化了地方和景观层面土地利用强度对作为害虫控制剂的步甲的影响。然后,我们评估了功能多样性和群落加权平均性状值与害虫控制及谷物产量之间的关联程度。此外,我们评估了对土地利用的响应以及不同物种对害虫控制和产量的影响如何随其性状而变化,以比较所研究性状的相对影响。步甲的功能多样性提高了蚜虫的清除率,但并未转化为更高的作物产量。更高比例的体型较小、善于移动且偏好植被层的步甲增强了对蚜虫的害虫控制。群落中体型较小的捕食性步甲提高了作物产量。与其他性状相比,对土地利用集约化的响应程度以及对害虫控制和产量的影响受体型的影响更大。我们的研究提供了证据,表明降低管理强度可以通过支持小型、具大翅的步甲来改善害虫控制。与生态集约化的观点相反,我们对土地利用对产量的直接影响以及通过步甲功能多样性和害虫控制产生的间接影响的联合分析表明,步甲提供的生态系统服务无法弥补因土地利用强度降低而导致的产量差距。