Community reorganization stabilizes freshwater ecosystems in intensively managed agricultural fields

被引:3
|
作者
Schiesari, L. [1 ]
Saito, V. [2 ]
Ferreira, J. [3 ]
Freitas, L. S. [1 ]
Goebbels, A. J. [1 ]
Leite, J. P. C. B. [1 ]
Oliveira, J. C. [3 ]
Pelinson, R. M. [1 ]
Querido, B. B.
Carmo, J. [4 ]
Espindola, E. L. G. [5 ]
Guedes-Munin, N. C. [6 ]
Montagner, C. [7 ]
Rossetto, R. [8 ]
Taniwaki, R. [9 ]
Martinelli, L. A. [10 ]
机构
[1] Univ Sao Paulo, Sch Arts Sci & Humanities, Environm Management, Sao Paulo, Brazil
[2] Univ Fed Sao Carlos, Dept Environm Sci, Sao Carlos, Brazil
[3] Univ Sao Paulo, Grad Program Ecol, Sao Paulo, Brazil
[4] Univ Fed Sao Carlos, Dept Environm Sci, Sorocaba, Brazil
[5] Univ Sao Paulo, Sao Carlos Sch Engn, Sao Carlos, Brazil
[6] Univ Fed Amazonas, Inst Exact Sci & Technol Itacoatiara, Itacoatiara, Brazil
[7] Univ Estadual Campinas, Dept Analyt Chem, Campinas, Brazil
[8] Sao Paulos Agcy Agribusiness Technol, Piracicaba, Brazil
[9] Fed Univ ABC, Ctr Engn Modeling & Appl Social Sci, Santo Andre, Brazil
[10] Univ Sao Paulo, Ctr Nucl Energy Agr, Piracicaba, Brazil
关键词
agroecosystem; ecosystem; metaecosystem; portfolio effect; stability; sustainable intensification; CONSEQUENCES; SYNCHRONY;
D O I
10.1111/1365-2664.14423
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Sustainable intensification may depend on associating precision farming with the harnessing of ecological principles in crop fields, and integrating farms and non-farmed land in productive landscapes. Small wetlands could play an important role in both pursuits for having high per-unit-area rates of element cycling and species richness while deeply penetrating crop fields. However, their potential for ecosystem service provisioning is unlikely to be met if land management intensification promotes ecosystem destabilization in biomass production.We tested the consequences of land use intensification on various dimensions of freshwater ecosystem stability by means of a large-scale field experiment converting extensive pastures to intensive pastures and sugarcane plantations in Southeastern Brazil. Nested within experimental plots were 4000 L mesocosms simulating ponds and puddles commonly found in productive landscapes. Mesocosms were monitored for basic physico-chemical parameters, nutrients, pesticides, phytoplankton standing crop, and the spontaneously colonizing biodiversity.Despite severe environmental change, the stability of sugarcane communities was no different from that of extensive and intensive pastures. This occurred because the local extinction of a sensitive top dragonfly predator following the application of vinasse and insecticide was compensated by colonization of a suite of more tolerant invertebrate mesopredators such as beetles and bugs. Community stability tended to increase with biomass asynchrony and species richness, evidencing a portfolio effect of biodiversity. Unfortunately, the species richness necessary to stabilize biomass production is unlikely to be available in many sugarcane fields and several other row crops.Synthesis and applications. Ponds and puddles could be effective centers of irradiation of ecosystem service provisioning in agricultural fields in terms of pest control; nutrient accumulation, cycling and export back to fields; and habitat and stepping stones for freshwater biodiversity. However, the impoverished biodiversity that results from a combination of harsh local conditions and spatial isolation renders pond communities inherently unstable. Given the unlikely, immediate reduction in agrochemical use in much of the intensively managed crop area, a combination of large, protected source wetlands at the margin of fields and small constructed or naturally forming ponds and puddles in plantations could contribute to sustainable intensification.
引用
收藏
页码:1327 / 1339
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Infectivity and community composition of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi from different soil depths in intensively managed agricultural ecosystems
    Jingping Gai
    Wenjun Gao
    Lei Liu
    Qing Chen
    Gu Feng
    Junling Zhang
    Peter Christie
    Xiaolin Li
    [J]. Journal of Soils and Sediments, 2015, 15 : 1200 - 1211
  • [2] Infectivity and community composition of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi from different soil depths in intensively managed agricultural ecosystems
    Gai, Jingping
    Gao, Wenjun
    Liu, Lei
    Chen, Qing
    Feng, Gu
    Zhang, Junling
    Christie, Peter
    Li, Xiaolin
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SOILS AND SEDIMENTS, 2015, 15 (05) : 1200 - 1211
  • [3] Nitrogen deposition and its contribution to nutrient inputs to intensively managed agricultural ecosystems
    He, Chun-E
    Wang, Xin
    Liu, Xuejun
    Fangmeier, Andreas
    Christie, Peter
    Zhang, Fusuo
    [J]. ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2010, 20 (01) : 80 - 90
  • [4] THE GROUND BEETLE (COLEOPTERA: CARABIDAE) COMMUNITY IN AN INTENSIVELY MANAGED AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPE
    Lemic, D.
    Cacija, M.
    Gasparic, Viric H.
    Drmic, Z.
    Bazok, R.
    Zivkovic, Pajac, I
    [J]. APPLIED ECOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 2017, 15 (04): : 661 - 674
  • [5] THE SPIDER FAUNA OF INTENSIVELY MANAGED AGRICULTURAL GRASSLANDS
    RUSHTON, SP
    EYRE, MD
    [J]. JOURNAL OF APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY-ZEITSCHRIFT FUR ANGEWANDTE ENTOMOLOGIE, 1989, 108 (03): : 291 - 297
  • [6] High diversity stabilizes the thermal resilience of pollinator communities in intensively managed grasslands
    Kuehsel, Sara
    Bluethgen, Nico
    [J]. NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2015, 6
  • [7] High diversity stabilizes the thermal resilience of pollinator communities in intensively managed grasslands
    Sara Kühsel
    Nico Blüthgen
    [J]. Nature Communications, 6
  • [8] Increase in soil nutrients in intensively managed cash-crop agricultural ecosystems in the Guanting Reservoir catchment, Beijing, China
    Zhang, Xinyu
    Chen, Liding
    Li, Qi
    Qi, Xin
    Yang, Shuang
    [J]. GEODERMA, 2013, 193 : 102 - 108
  • [9] Evidence for functional state transitions in intensively-managed soil ecosystems
    Todman, L. C.
    Fraser, F. C.
    Corstanje, R.
    Harris, J. A.
    Pawlett, M.
    Ritz, K.
    Whitmore, A. P.
    [J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2018, 8
  • [10] Bird responses to housing development in intensively managed agricultural landscapes
    Simon Gillings
    [J]. Urban Ecosystems, 2019, 22 : 1007 - 1017