On the relationship between farmland biodiversity and land-use intensity in Europe

Worldwide agriculture is one of the main drivers of biodiversity decline. Effective conservation strategies depend on the type of relationship between biodiversity and land-use intensity, but to date the shape of this relationship is unknown. We linked plant species richness with nitrogen (N) input...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences Biological sciences, 2009-03, Vol.276 (1658), p.903-909
Hauptverfasser: Kleijn, D, Kohler, F, Báldi, A, Batáry, P, Concepción, E.D, Clough, Y, Díaz, M, Gabriel, D, Holzschuh, A, Knop, E, Kovács, A, Marshall, E.J.P, Tscharntke, T, Verhulst, J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Worldwide agriculture is one of the main drivers of biodiversity decline. Effective conservation strategies depend on the type of relationship between biodiversity and land-use intensity, but to date the shape of this relationship is unknown. We linked plant species richness with nitrogen (N) input as an indicator of land-use intensity on 130 grasslands and 141 arable fields in six European countries. Using Poisson regression, we found that plant species richness was significantly negatively related to N input on both field types after the effects of confounding environmental factors had been accounted for. Subsequent analyses showed that exponentially declining relationships provided a better fit than linear or unimodal relationships and that this was largely the result of the response of rare species (relative cover less than 1%). Our results indicate that conservation benefits are disproportionally more costly on high-intensity than on low-intensity farmland. For example, reducing N inputs from 75 to 0 and 400 to 60 kg ha−1 yr−1 resulted in about the same estimated species gain for arable plants. Conservation initiatives are most (cost-)effective if they are preferentially implemented in extensively farmed areas that still support high levels of biodiversity.
ISSN:0962-8452
1471-2954
DOI:10.1098/rspb.2008.1509