Authors
Adrien Rusch, Rebecca Chaplin-Kramer, Mary M Gardiner, Violetta Hawro, John Holland, Douglas Landis, Carsten Thies, Teja Tscharntke, Wolfgang W Weisser, Camilla Winqvist, Megan Woltz, Riccardo Bommarco
Publication date
2016/4/1
Journal
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
Volume
221
Pages
198-204
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Numerous studies show that landscape simplification reduces abundance and diversity of natural enemies in agroecosystems, but its effect on natural pest control remains poorly quantified. Further, natural enemy impacts on pest populations have usually been estimated for a limited number of taxa and have not considered interactions among predator species. In a quantitative synthesis with data collected from several cropping systems in Europe and North America, we analyzed how the level and within-field spatial stability of natural pest control services was related to the simplification of the surrounding landscape. All studies used aphids as a model species and exclusion cages to measure aphid pest control. Landscape simplification was quantified by the proportion of cultivated land within a 1 km radius around each plot. We found a consistent negative effect of landscape simplification on the level of natural …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Rusch, R Chaplin-Kramer, MM Gardiner, V Hawro… - Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, 2016