537 research outputs found
Landscape heterogeneity as an ecological filter of species traits
International audienceLandscape heterogeneity is a major driver of biodiversity in agricultural areas and represents an important parameter in conservation strategies. However, most landscape ecology studies measure gamma diversity of a single habitat type, despite the assessment of multiple habitats at a landscape scale being more appropriate. This study aimed to determine the effects of landscape composition and spatial configuration on life-history trait distribution in carabid beetle and herbaceous plant communities. Here, we assessed the gamma diversity of carabid beetles and plants by sampling three dominant habitats (woody habitats, grasslands and crops) across 20 landscapes in western France. RLQ and Fourth Corner three-table analyses were used to assess the association of dispersal, phenology, reproduction and trophic level traits with landscape characteristics. Landscape composition and configuration were both significant in explaining functional composition. Carabid beetles and plants showed similar response regarding phenology, i.e. open landscapes were associated with earlier breeding species. Carabid beetle dispersal traits exhibited the strongest relationship with landscape structure; for instance, large and apterous species preferentially inhabited woody landscapes, whereas small and macropterous species preferentially inhabited open landscapes. Heavy seeded plant species dominated in intensified agricultural landscapes (high % crops), possibly due to the removal of weeds (which are usually lightweight seeded species). The results of this study emphasise the roles of landscape composition and configuration as ecological filters and the importance of preserving a range of landscape types to maintain functional biodiversity at regional scales
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The legacy of 20th Century landscape change on today’s woodland carabid communities
Aim
For many species, the effects of landscape change can involve a time lag and result in an extinction debt. The landscape matrix plays a vital role in supporting species populations. However, the importance of the historical composition and configuration of landscape mosaics has received little attention, with studies focusing on the effects of loss and fragmentation of single (focal) habitat over time. We investigated the importance of historical and contemporary landscape heterogeneity (composition and configuration) to identify how landscape change has, and is continuing to have, an effect on current woodland carabid communities.
Location
Lowland Britain.
Methods
Carabids were sampled from woodlands in 36 tetrads of 4 km2. Ordination methods analysed current community response to representations of contemporary and historical (1930’s) landscape heterogeneity. The effects of 80 years of landscape change on current carabid assemblages were compared among tetrads.
Results
Results are consistent with an extinction debt; carabid communities correlated significantly with the historical composition and configuration of the landscape, but not contemporary landscape configuration. Community assemblages have been shaped, and many species remain affiliated with landscape conditions that no longer exist, notably, large patches of broadleaf woodland and semi-natural grassland. Recent introduction of conifer plantations has had a negative effect on the abundance of many woodland species. For many common, slow-dispersing species, contemporary and historical landscapes offered sub-optimum woodland coverage indicating a lag effect that exceeds 80 years. Increased arable landcover and loss of semi-natural grassland and heathland points towards an ongoing detrimental impact on carabid populations.
Main conclusions
Compared with focal-habitat studies, the landscape mosaic approach provides a more comprehensive understanding of the effects of widespread landscape change on species communities. Conservation guidance includes new planting, maintenance and restoration of semi-natural habitats, implemented across multiple spatial scales and where feasible, considering both historical and contemporary landscape heterogeneity
Mission d'étude du volet matériel de régie de la Saed. Sénégal 7 au 17 janvier 1986
La lettre de mission a défini une politique dite de désengagement de la Saed qui a pour objectif de transférer aux groupements d'agriculteurs et à d'autres organismes privés, les activités décentralisables qui n'ont pas de caractère de service public, ce dernier restant du ressort de la Saed. Dans ce cadre, il a été confié à la Sinorg une étude sur l'évolution des fonctions de la Saed dans les conditions de désengagement et l'incidence de cette évolution sur le personnel (reconversion formation). Cette étude a été complétée par une analyse plus approfondie de deux structures importantes : les rizeries de la Saed (étude CTFT) ; le parc mécanisé de la Saed (étude Ceemat)
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The heterogeneity of wooded-agricultural landscape mosaics influences woodland bird community assemblages
Context
Landscape heterogeneity (the composition and configuration of different landcover types) plays a key role in shaping woodland bird assemblages in wooded-agricultural mosaics. Understanding how species respond to landscape factors could contribute to preventing further decline of woodland bird populations.
Objective
To investigate how woodland birds with different species traits respond to landscape heterogeneity, and to identify whether specific landcover types are important for maintaining diverse populations in wooded-agricultural environments.
Methods
Birds were sampled from woodlands in 58 2 x 2 km tetrads across southern Britain. Landscape heterogeneity was quantified for each tetrad. Bird assemblage response was determined using redundancy analysis combined with variation partitioning and response trait analyses.
Results
For woodland bird assemblages, the independent explanatory importance of landscape composition and landscape configuration variables were closely interrelated. When considered simultaneously during variation partitioning, the community response was better represented by compositional variables. Different species responded to different landscape features and this could be explained by traits relating to woodland association, foraging strata and nest location. Ubiquitous, generalist species, many of which were hole-nesters or ground foragers, correlated positively with urban landcover while specialists of broadleaved woodland avoided landscapes containing urban areas. Species typical of coniferous woodland correlated with large conifer plantations.
Conclusions
At the 2 x 2 km scale, there was evidence that the availability of resources provided by proximate landcover types was highly important for shaping woodland bird assemblages. Further research to disentangle the effects of composition and configuration at different spatial scales is advocated
Evaluation der Ökomassnahmen: Bereich Biodiversität
1993 führte der Bund ökologische Direktzahlungen ein; seit 1999 ist die Erbringung des ökologischen Leistungsnachweises (ÖLN) durch die Landwirtschaftsbetriebe die Voraussetzung zum Bezug von Direktzahlungen. Heute werden 97 % der landwirtschaftlichen Nutzfläche nach den Regeln des ÖLN bewirtschaftet.
Die wichtigste Massnahme des ÖLN, welche einen Einfluss auf die Biodiversität hat, ist, dass die Betriebe 7 % ihrer landwirtschaftlichen Nutzfläche (LN) als ökologische Ausgleichsflächen (öAF) auszuweisen haben (bei Spezialkulturen 3,5 %). Weitere Anforderungen des ÖLN (ausgeglichene Nährstoffbilanz, geregelte Fruchtfolge, Bodenschutz, gezielter Einsatz von Pflanzenschutzmitteln, tiergerechte Haltung der Nutztiere) können ebenfalls einen Einfluss haben, stehen jedoch weniger im Vordergrund
Harnessing the biodiversity value of Central and Eastern European farmland
A large proportion of European biodiversity today depends on habitat provided by low-intensity farming practices, yet this resource is declining as European agriculture intensifies. Within the European Union, particularly the central and eastern new member states have retained relatively large areas of species-rich farmland, but despite increased investment in nature conservation here in recent years, farmland biodiversity trends appear to be worsening. Although the high biodiversity value of Central and Eastern European farmland has long been reported, the amount of research in the international literature focused on farmland biodiversity in this region remains comparatively tiny, and measures within the EU Common Agricultural Policy are relatively poorly adapted to support it. In this opinion study, we argue that, 10years after the accession of the first eastern EU new member states, the continued under-representation of the low-intensity farmland in Central and Eastern Europe in the international literature and EU policy is impeding the development of sound, evidence-based conservation interventions. The biodiversity benefits for Europe of existing low-intensity farmland, particularly in the central and eastern states, should be harnessed before they are lost. Instead of waiting for species-rich farmland to further decline, targeted research and monitoring to create locally appropriate conservation strategies for these habitats is needed now.Peer reviewe
Forty years of carabid beetle research in Europe - from taxonomy, biology, ecology and population studies to bioindication, habitat assessment and conservation
Volume: 100Start Page: 55End Page: 14
Aider à la gestion des services de régulation naturelle des bioagresseurs : enjeux de connaissances et de prise en compte des agriculteurs : une approche bibliographique
Comment construire des connaissances pour aider les agriculteurs à mieux mobiliser les services de régulation naturelle des bioagresseurs? Nous avons réalisé une revue de la littérature scientifique pour examiner si et comment les connaissances produites pouvaient aider à la réalisation d'un diagnostic de ces services. Nous avons considéré pour cela que ces connaissances devaient porter sur les relations entre i) la problématique de la régulation naturelle des bioagresseurs, ii) les facteurs affectant cette problématique (e.g., pratiques agricoles, environnement paysager), et iii) les ressources des agriculteurs impactées par la régulation biologique (e.g., productions) et/ou permettant de maîtriser les facteurs affectant cette régulation (e.g., ressources en connaissance, travail, équipements). Nous avons aussi examiné si les dynamiques temporelles de ces relations étaient étudiées (Duru, Therond et al, 2015). 1. Nous avons réalisé une requête large dans le Web Of Science des études portant sur le contrôle, y compris chimique et/ou mécanique, des bioagresseurs (15334 articles). 2. Ayant peu de mots clés précis pour identifier les dimensions d'un diagnostic dans ces études, nous avons construit et mobilisé des dictionnaires de mots clés dans une analyse lexicale de notices avec l'outil CorText. Un sous-corpus de 6024 articles a été obtenu après extraction d'études hors-sujet. Nous avons identifié 9 thématiques diversement combinées dans les études, les plus fréquentes étant: "gestion des bioagresseurs", "gestion des adventices", "systèmes de cultures", "modélisation et prise de décision", "acteurs et système d'exploitation" et "agroécosystème et paysage". 3. Afin d'identifier les connaissances utiles pour un diagnostic à partir de ces thématiques, nous avons échantillonné des études selon leurs profils et les avons analysées à partir d'une grille de lecture ad hoc. Nous présentons les résultats pour une sélection de 31 études les plus pertinentes a priori. Leurs notices mentionnent la régulation naturelle des bioagresseurs et combinent 3-5 thématiques dont au moins "acteurs et systèmes d'exploitation": notre hypothèse est qu'elles prennent en compte explicitement les acteurs et leurs ressources. Ces études sont effectivement les plus riches. Cependant la plupart n'étudient aucune dynamique temporelle. Nous avons distingué 3 groupes. Le premier groupe (15 articles) met l'accent sur l'élucidation de l'influence relative des facteurs "pratiques" et "paysage" sur le phénomène de régulation; les ressources des agriculteurs sont contextuelles (ex: comparaison agriculture biologique vs. agriculture conventionnelle). Le deuxième groupe (6 articles) met l'accent sur l'impact de la régulation biologique et/ou des nouvelles pratiques et aménagements paysagers sur les ressources des agriculteurs (e.g., coûts/bénéfices économiques) à l'échelle de la parcelle. Le dernier groupe (10 articles) est le plus intégrateur des composantes du diagnostic; on y trouve le plus d'études engagée dans l'accompagnement des agriculteurs, notamment l'apprentissage collectif (Bell et al, 2016; Robertson et al, 2014)
Agroforestry systems of high nature and cultural value in Europe: provision of commercial goods and other ecosystem services
Land use systems that integrate woody vegetation with livestock and/or crops and are recognised for their biodiversity and cultural importance can be termed high nature and cultural value (HNCV) agroforestry. In this review, based on the literature and stakeholder knowledge, we describe the structure, components and management practices of ten contrasting HNCV agroforestry systems distributed across five European bioclimatic regions. We also compile and categorize the ecosystem services provided by these agroforestry systems, following the Common International Classification of Ecosystem Services. HNCV agroforestry in Europe generally enhances biodiversity and regulating ecosystem services relative to conventional agriculture and forestry. These systems can reduce fire risk, compared to conventional forestry, and can increase carbon sequestration, moderate the microclimate, and reduce soil erosion and nutrient leaching compared to conventional agriculture. However, some of the evidence is location specific and a better geographical coverage is needed to generalize patterns at broader scales. Although some traditional practices and products have been abandoned, many of the studied systems continue to provide multiple woody and non-woody plant products and high-quality food from livestock and game. Some of the cultural value of these systems can also be captured through tourism and local events. However there remains a continual challenge for farmers, landowners and society to fully translate the positive social and environmental impacts of HNCV agroforestry into market prices for the products and services
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