Back to Search
Start Over
Low-intensity agricultural landscapes in Transylvania support high butterfly diversity: implications for conservation
- Source :
- PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 9, Iss 7, p e103256 (2014), Loos, J, Dorresteijn, I, Hanspach, J, Fust, P, Rakosy, L & Fischer, J 2014, ' Low-intensity agricultural landscapes in Transylvania support high butterfly diversity : Implications for conservation ', PLoS ONE, vol. 9, no. 7, e103256 . https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0103256, Loos, J, Dorresteijn, I, Hanspach, J, Fust, P, Rakosy, L & Fischer, J 2014, ' Low-intensity agricultural landscapes in Transylvania support high butterfly diversity : Implications for conservation ' PLoS ONE, vol 9, no. 7, e103256 . DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0103256
- Publication Year :
- 2014
-
Abstract
- European farmland biodiversity is declining due to land use changes towards agricultural intensification or abandonment. Some Eastern European farming systems have sustained traditional forms of use, resulting in high levels of biodiversity. However, global markets and international policies now imply rapid and major changes to these systems. To effectively protect farmland biodiversity, understanding landscape features which underpin species diversity is crucial. Focusing on butterflies, we addressed this question for a cultural-historic landscape in Southern Transylvania, Romania. Following a natural experiment, we randomly selected 120 survey sites in farmland, 60 each in grassland and arable land. We surveyed butterfly species richness and abundance by walking transects with four repeats in summer 2012. We analysed species composition using Detrended Correspondence Analysis. We modelled species richness, richness of functional groups, and abundance of selected species in response to topography, woody vegetation cover and heterogeneity at three spatial scales, using generalised linear mixed effects models. Species composition widely overlapped in grassland and arable land. Composition changed along gradients of heterogeneity at local and context scales, and of woody vegetation cover at context and landscape scales. The effect of local heterogeneity on species richness was positive in arable land, but negative in grassland. Plant species richness, and structural and topographic conditions at multiple scales explained species richness, richness of functional groups and species abundances. Our study revealed high conservation value of both grassland and arable land in low-intensity Eastern European farmland. Besides grassland, also heterogeneous arable land provides important habitat for butterflies. While butterfly diversity in arable land benefits from heterogeneity by small-scale structures, grasslands should be protected from fragmentation to provide sufficiently large areas for butterflies. These findings have important implications for EU agricultural and conservation policy. Most importantly, conservation management needs to consider entire landscapes, and implement appropriate measures at multiple spatial scales. European farmland biodiversity is declining due to land use changes towards agricultural intensification or abandonment. Some Eastern European farming systems have sustained traditional forms of use, resulting in high levels of biodiversity. However, global markets and international policies now imply rapid and major changes to these systems. To effectively protect farmland biodiversity, understanding landscape features which underpin species diversity is crucial. Focusing on butterflies, we addressed this question for a cultural-historic landscape in Southern Transylvania, Romania. Following a natural experiment, we randomly selected 120 survey sites in farmland, 60 each in grassland and arable land. We surveyed butterfly species richness and abundance by walking transects with four repeats in summer 2012. We analysed species composition using Detrended Correspondence Analysis. We modelled species richness, richness of functional groups, and abundance of selected species in response to topography, woody vegetation cover and heterogeneity at three spatial scales, using generalised linear mixed effects models. Species composition widely overlapped in grassland and arable land. Composition changed along gradients of heterogeneity at local and context scales, and of woody vegetation cover at context and landscape scales. The effect of local heterogeneity on species richness was positive in arable land, but negative in grassland. Plant species richness, and structural and topographic conditions at multiple scales explained species richness, richness of functional groups and species abundances. Our study revealed high conservation value of both grassland and arable land in low-intensity Eastern European farmland. Besides grassland, also heterogeneous arable land provides important habitat for butterflies. While butterfly diversity in arable land benefits from heterogeneity by small-scale structures, grasslands should be protected from fragmentation to provide sufficiently large areas for butterflies. These findings have important implications for EU agricultural and conservation policy. Most importantly, conservation management needs to consider entire landscapes, and implement appropriate measures at multiple spatial scales.
- Subjects :
- Conservation of Natural Resources
Population Dynamics
Biodiversity
lcsh:Medicine
Sustainability Science
Ecosystems
Animals
Spatial and Landscape Ecology
lcsh:Science
Ecosystem
Environmental planning
Conservation Science
Multidisciplinary
Habitat fragmentation
Land use
Ecology
Agroforestry
Romania
lcsh:R
Ecology and Environmental Sciences
Species diversity
Biology and Life Sciences
Agriculture
Vegetation
Grassland
Geography
article
biodiversity
butterfly
correspondence analysis
grassland
habitat fragmentation
landscape ecology
nonhuman
population abundance
species composition
species conservation
species diversity
species richness
topography
vegetation
woody vegetation
agriculture
animal
classification
ecosystem
environmental protection
population dynamics
procedures
season
lcsh:Q
Species richness
Seasons
Landscape ecology
Arable land
Butterflies
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19326203
- Volume :
- 9
- Issue :
- 7
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PloS one
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....39218a542e4507ff06a616e92697e107
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0103256