Positive effects of organic viticulture on carabid beetles depend on landscape and local habitat conditions

Agricultural intensification is a major cause of biodiversity loss. Organic farming may counteract the loss of species, however, knowledge about its benefits for perennial agroecosystems such as vineyards is incomplete. We, therefore, analysed the effects of organic viticulture on carabid beetles, a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of applied biology 2022-09, Vol.181 (2), p.192-200
Hauptverfasser: Schirmel, Jens, Petschner, Stefan, Rösch, Verena, Entling, Martin H.
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container_title Annals of applied biology
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creator Schirmel, Jens
Petschner, Stefan
Rösch, Verena
Entling, Martin H.
description Agricultural intensification is a major cause of biodiversity loss. Organic farming may counteract the loss of species, however, knowledge about its benefits for perennial agroecosystems such as vineyards is incomplete. We, therefore, analysed the effects of organic viticulture on carabid beetles, a frequently used indicator group in agroecology. We investigated organic and conventional vineyards in two different landscapes (‘simple’ vs. ‘complex’) in SW Germany using a paired design. As a key result we found positive effects of organic viticulture on carabid diversity only in the simple landscape while such an effect was not obvious in the more complex landscape. Moreover, the species composition was differently influenced by organic management between the two landscapes indicating context‐dependent responses of carabid species towards the farming practice. We conclude that positive effects of organic viticulture on carabid beetle diversity differ with landscape context and depend on local habitat conditions such as slope inclination and the inter‐row vegetation. Our results therefore indicate that organic viticulture benefits are not only highly variable among taxonomic groups, but can have even varying effects within one insect family. We investigated carabid beetles in organic and conventional vineyards in two different landscapes (‘simple’ vs. ‘complex’) in SW Germany using a paired design. As a key result we found positive effects of organic viticulture on carabid diversity only in the simple landscape while such an effect was not obvious in the more complex landscape. Moreover, the species composition was differently influenced by organic management between the two landscapes indicating context‐dependent responses of carabid species towards the farming practice.
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subjects Agricultural ecosystems
agricultural intensification
Agroecology
Beetles
Biodiversity
Biodiversity loss
carabid beetles
Coleoptera
Context
Farming
fungicides
Insects
inter‐row vegetation
Landscape
Organic farming
Species composition
Vineyards
Viticulture
Wineries & vineyards
title Positive effects of organic viticulture on carabid beetles depend on landscape and local habitat conditions
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