Arthropod decline in grasslands and forests is associated with landscape-level drivers

被引:0
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作者
Sebastian Seibold
Martin M. Gossner
Nadja K. Simons
Nico Blüthgen
Jörg Müller
Didem Ambarlı
Christian Ammer
Jürgen Bauhus
Markus Fischer
Jan C. Habel
Karl Eduard Linsenmair
Thomas Nauss
Caterina Penone
Daniel Prati
Peter Schall
Ernst-Detlef Schulze
Juliane Vogt
Stephan Wöllauer
Wolfgang W. Weisser
机构
[1] Technical University of Munich,Terrestrial Ecology Research Group, Department of Ecology and Ecosystem Management
[2] Julius-Maximilians-University Würzburg,Field Station Fabrikschleichach, Department of Animal Ecology and Tropical Biology
[3] Forest Entomology,Ecological Networks, Department of Biology
[4] Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL,Department of Agricultural Biotechnology, Faculty of Agricultural and Natural Sciences
[5] Technical University of Darmstadt,Silviculture and Forest Ecology of the Temperate Zones
[6] Bavarian Forest National Park,Institute of Forest Sciences, Faculty of Environment and Natural Resources
[7] Düzce University,Institute of Plant Sciences
[8] University of Göttingen,Evolutionary Zoology, Biosciences
[9] University of Freiburg,Department of Animal Ecology and Tropical Biology
[10] University of Bern,Faculty of Geography
[11] Salzburg University,undefined
[12] Julius-Maximilians-University Würzburg,undefined
[13] Philipps-University Marburg,undefined
[14] Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry,undefined
来源
Nature | 2019年 / 574卷
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摘要
Recent reports of local extinctions of arthropod species1, and of massive declines in arthropod biomass2, point to land-use intensification as a major driver of decreasing biodiversity. However, to our knowledge, there are no multisite time series of arthropod occurrences across gradients of land-use intensity with which to confirm causal relationships. Moreover, it remains unclear which land-use types and arthropod groups are affected, and whether the observed declines in biomass and diversity are linked to one another. Here we analyse data from more than 1 million individual arthropods (about 2,700 species), from standardized inventories taken between 2008 and 2017 at 150 grassland and 140 forest sites in 3 regions of Germany. Overall gamma diversity in grasslands and forests decreased over time, indicating loss of species across sites and regions. In annually sampled grasslands, biomass, abundance and number of species declined by 67%, 78% and 34%, respectively. The decline was consistent across trophic levels and mainly affected rare species; its magnitude was independent of local land-use intensity. However, sites embedded in landscapes with a higher cover of agricultural land showed a stronger temporal decline. In 30 forest sites with annual inventories, biomass and species number—but not abundance—decreased by 41% and 36%, respectively. This was supported by analyses of all forest sites sampled in three-year intervals. The decline affected rare and abundant species, and trends differed across trophic levels. Our results show that there are widespread declines in arthropod biomass, abundance and the number of species across trophic levels. Arthropod declines in forests demonstrate that loss is not restricted to open habitats. Our results suggest that major drivers of arthropod decline act at larger spatial scales, and are (at least for grasslands) associated with agriculture at the landscape level. This implies that policies need to address the landscape scale to mitigate the negative effects of land-use practices.
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页码:671 / 674
页数:3
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