Effects of cultivation practice on floristic and flowering diversity of spontaneously growing plant species on arable fields
In the past, the floristic diversity of arable fields has been described in terms of species diversity (SD) and their degree of coverage (C), but never in combination with the recording of the actually flowered species (FS) and their flowering intensity (FI) to striking differences in the cultivatio...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ecology and evolution 2021-11, Vol.11 (21), p.15351-15363 |
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Zusammenfassung: | In the past, the floristic diversity of arable fields has been described in terms of species diversity (SD) and their degree of coverage (C), but never in combination with the recording of the actually flowered species (FS) and their flowering intensity (FI) to striking differences in the cultivation methods on arable land. In relation to SD and C, however, FS and FI may provide important additional information on the functional biodiversity of fields. The aim was therefore to investigate the effects of (a) conventional, (b) organic, and (c) smallholder (never application of herbicides) on the floristic diversity. Using a region in Germany, we investigated SD, C, FS, and FI synchronously in (a), (b), and (c), by 356 vegetation surveys (5 × 5 m plots) conducted in spring and summer in 2019 in winter cereals. Statistical tests were used to analyze the differences between (a), (b), and (c). The medians were used to compare the floristic diversity of (a), (b), and (c) and finally relationships of FS and FI to SD were analyzed in relation to the cultivation methods. Significant differences in SD, C, FS, and FI were found between the (a), (b), and (c) in spring and summer characterized by sharp declines from (c) to (b) to (a). A drastic reduction in floristic diversity from (c) 100 to (b) 52 to (a) 3 was determined. Plants in flower (FS, FI) were very poorly in (a), moderately well to well in (b), and well to very well represented in (c). (C) to (a) was characterized by a sharp decline and from (a) to (b) by sharp increase in floristic diversity. With current acreage proportions of (a) in mind, this would affect, about one third of land area in Germany, associated with a drastic reduction in functional biodiversity for insects.
Significant differences in species diversity (SD), coverage (C), flowering species (FS) and flowering intensity (FI) were found between the three fundamentally different cultivation methods of arable fields: (a) conventional farmland; (b) organic farmland; and (c) smallholder farmland that had never been treated with pesticides. These were characterised by sharp declines in SD, C, FS and FI from (c) to (b) to (a), summarised in a relation of the floristic diversity from 100 to 52 to 3 associated with a drastic reduction in functional biodiversity for insects. |
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ISSN: | 2045-7758 2045-7758 |
DOI: | 10.1002/ece3.8223 |