On the relationship between farmland biodiversity and land-use intensity in Europe

Author:

Kleijn D12,Kohler F3,Báldi A4,Batáry P5,Concepción E.D6,Clough Y7,Díaz M6,Gabriel D7,Holzschuh A7,Knop E8,Kovács A9,Marshall E.J.P10,Tscharntke T7,Verhulst J3

Affiliation:

1. Alterra, Centre for Ecosystem StudiesDroevendaalsesteeg 3, PO Box 47, 6700 AA, Wageningen, The Netherlands

2. Department of Aquatic Ecology and Environmental Biology, Nijmegen UniversityToernooiveld 1, 6525 ED, Nijmegen, The Netherlands

3. Nature Conservation and Plant Ecology Group, Wageningen UniversityBornsesteeg 69, 6708 PD, Wageningen, The Netherlands

4. Animal Ecology Research Group of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungarian Natural History Museum1083 Budapest, Hungary

5. Hungarian Natural History Museum 1083 Budapest, Hungary

6. Instituto de Recursos NaturalesIRN-CCMA-CSIC, c/Serrano 115 bis, 28006 Madrid, Spain

7. Department of Agroecology, University of GöttingenWaldweg 26, 37073 Göttingen, Germany

8. Agroscope FAL Reckenholz, Swiss Federal Research Station for Agroecology and AgricultureReckenholzstrasse 191, CH-8046 Zürich, Switzerland

9. PhD School of Environmental Sciences, Szent István UniversityGödöllő, Hungary

10. Marshall Agroecology Limited2 Nut Tree Cottages, Barton, Winscombe, Somerset BS25 1DU, UK

Abstract

Worldwide agriculture is one of the main drivers of biodiversity decline. Effective conservation strategies depend on the type of relationship between biodiversity and land-use intensity, but to date the shape of this relationship is unknown. We linked plant species richness with nitrogen (N) input as an indicator of land-use intensity on 130 grasslands and 141 arable fields in six European countries. Using Poisson regression, we found that plant species richness was significantly negatively related to N input on both field types after the effects of confounding environmental factors had been accounted for. Subsequent analyses showed that exponentially declining relationships provided a better fit than linear or unimodal relationships and that this was largely the result of the response of rare species (relative cover less than 1%). Our results indicate that conservation benefits are disproportionally more costly on high-intensity than on low-intensity farmland. For example, reducing N inputs from 75 to 0 and 400 to 60 kg ha −1  yr −1 resulted in about the same estimated species gain for arable plants. Conservation initiatives are most (cost-)effective if they are preferentially implemented in extensively farmed areas that still support high levels of biodiversity.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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