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The relationship between agricultural intensification and biological control: experimental tests across Europe
Authors:Thies Carsten  Haenke Sebastian  Scherber Christoph  Bengtsson Janne  Bommarco Riccardo  Clement Lars W  Ceryngier Piotr  Dennis Christopher  Emmerson Mark  Gagic Vesna  Hawro Violetta  Liira Jaan  Weisser Wolfgang W  Winqvist Camilla  Tscharntke Teja
Institution:Department of Crop Science, Agroecology, Georg-August-University, Waldweg 26, 37073 G?ttingen, Germany. carsten.thies@agr.uni-goettingen.de
Abstract:Agricultural intensification can affect biodiversity and related ecosystem services such as biological control, but large-scale experimental evidence is missing. We examined aphid pest populations in cereal fields under experimentally reduced densities of (1) ground-dwelling predators (-G), (2) vegetation-dwelling predators and parasitoids (-V), (3) a combination of (1) and (2) (-G-V), compared with open-fields (control), in contrasting landscapes with low vs. high levels of agricultural intensification (AI), and in five European regions. Aphid populations were 28%, 97%, and 199% higher in -G, -V, and -G-V treatments, respectively, compared to the open fields, indicating synergistic effects of both natural-enemy groups. Enhanced parasitoid: host and predator: prey ratios were related to reduced aphid population density and population growth. The relative importance of parasitoids and vegetation-dwelling predators greatly differed among European regions, and agricultural intensification affected biological control and aphid density only in some regions. This shows a changing role of species group identity in diverse enemy communities and a need to consider region-specific landscape management.
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