Increasing crop field size does not consistently exacerbate insect pest problems

Author:

Rosenheim Jay A.1ORCID,Cluff Emma1,Lippey Mia K.1,Cass Bodil N.1,Paredes Daniel2ORCID,Parsa Soroush3,Karp Daniel S.4ORCID,Chaplin-Kramer Rebecca567ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Entomology and Nematology, University of California, Davis, CA 95616

2. Environmental Resources Analysis Research Group, Department of Plant Biology, Ecology and Earth Sciences, Universidad de Extremadura, Badajoz 06006, Spain

3. Regional Office for Latin America and the Caribbean, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Avenida Dag Hammarskjöld 3241, Vitacura Santiago 7630000, Chile

4. Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Conservation Biology, University of California, Davis, CA 95616

5. Institute on the Environment, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108

6. SPRING, Oakland, CA 94618

7. Natural Capital Project, Woods Institute for the Environment, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94618

Abstract

Increasing diversity on farms can enhance many key ecosystem services to and from agriculture, and natural control of arthropod pests is often presumed to be among them. The expectation that increasing the size of monocultural crop plantings exacerbates the impact of pests is common throughout the agroecological literature. However, the theoretical basis for this expectation is uncertain; mechanistic mathematical models suggest instead that increasing field size can have positive, negative, neutral, or even nonlinear effects on arthropod pest densities. Here, we report a broad survey of crop field-size effects: across 14 pest species, 5 crops, and 20,000 field years of observations, we quantify the impact of field size on pest densities, pesticide applications, and crop yield. We find no evidence that larger fields cause consistently worse pest impacts. The most common outcome (9 of 14 species) was for pest severity to be independent of field size; larger fields resulted in less severe pest problems for four species, and only one species exhibited the expected trend of larger fields worsening pest severity. Importantly, pest responses to field size strongly correlated with their responses to the fraction of the surrounding landscape planted to the focal crop, suggesting that shared ecological processes produce parallel responses to crop simplification across spatial scales. We conclude that the idea that larger field sizes consistently disrupt natural pest control services is without foundation in either the theoretical or empirical record.

Funder

California Department of Pesticide Regulation

USDA | National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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