Agricultural Intensity And Biodiversity Partitioning In Europe
This study examined the effects of intensive farming methods on the biodiversity in eight European countries: Estonia, France, Germany, Ireland, Netherlands, Poland, Spain and Sweden. Researchers focused on the biodiversity of plants, beetles, and birds and measured the influence of agricultural intensification (AI). AI was estimated using fertilizer and pesticide use as well as the presence of various weeding and tilling operations. Researchers found that biodiversity was most impacted on individual fields, but not at a regional level.
Abstract from European Commission DG Environment News Alert Service:
“For all regions studied at all three scales (field, farm and regional), AI was linked to reduced diversity of plants and birds, but not ground beetles. This suggests the impact of AI on biodiversity is not uniform and some groups of species are more affected than others. In addition, how mobile the different groups of species are, plays an important role in the pattern of diversity found across the landscape.”
- “High levels of AI affected plants at all scales: plants are not mobile and the more simplified the landscape became (with associated loss of diverse habitats), the greater the loss of plant diversity.”
- “High levels of AI especially affected birds at the farm and region scale. However, with low levels of AI, the diversity of birds was increased. Less intensive agricultural management of fields (e.g. less weed control), maintaining a diversity of field margins (such as hedgerows and woodland) and providing semi-natural habitats in arable landscapes are all important for bird diversity.”
- “Ground beetle diversity found within fields probably benefitted from having various types of field margins and near-by semi-natural areas, which would supply habitats for new recruits of beetles to the fields.”
“Although the level of intensive agriculture practised locally by farmers affected species diversity at the field scale, biodiversity (especially of birds and ground beetles) found among different communities at the farm scale was more important in terms of regional biodiversity. Therefore, different local farming practices significantly affect the pattern of the landscape structure and the biodiversity found in agricultural landscapes.”