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Relationships between sensitivity to agricultural intensification and ecological traits of insectivorous mammals and arthropods. | LitMetric

Relationships between sensitivity to agricultural intensification and ecological traits of insectivorous mammals and arthropods.

Conserv Biol

School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1UG, United Kingdom.

Published: October 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how ecological traits like life-history, trophic level, and mobility affect animals' sensitivity to agricultural changes, specifically targeting insectivorous mammals and their prey.
  • Researchers used a matched-pair design to assess sensitivity in different farming scenarios such as organic versus conventional crops, and various grassland management techniques.
  • Findings indicated that traits tied to quick reproduction and low mobility played a significant role in sensitivity, with variations observed depending on the specific type of agricultural intensification tested.

Article Abstract

We tested the hypothesis that variation in the sensitivity of animals to habitat change is explained by ecological traits (life-history traits, trophic level, and mobility). We measured the sensitivity of insectivorous mammals (shrews and bats) and their prey (arthropods active at the soil surface and nocturnal aerial arthropods) to three aspects of agricultural intensification in a matched-pair experimental design: increased use of agrochemicals (comparison of organic and conventional cereal crops, with pairing for the size of the boundary hedge), change in grassland management from hay to silage (with pairing for the size of the boundary hedge), and increased field size due to hedgerow loss (with boundary-field comparisons as a proxy). We assessed the sensitivity of taxa as the difference in their relative abundance between pairs of high- and low-intensity sites for each aspect of agricultural intensification. We used phylogenetically informed analyses to explore cross-species relationships between our measures of sensitivity and seven ecological traits of animals (e.g., trophic level, mobility, and reproductive rate). Several traits were related to the sensitivity of animals to agricultural intensification. These traits were mainly associated with fast life histories (high reproductive output and low trophic level) and low mobility. Trophic level of adults was related to sensitivity to habitat change for all three aspects of agricultural intensification, but the direction of the relationship differed between the three aspects of intensification. The significance of the relationship between other ecological traits and sensitivity to intensification varied for the three aspects of agricultural intensification. Our results show that some ecological traits can be used to preselect taxa that are predicted to be sensitive to habitat change, and their sensitivity can be tested empirically for use as biotic indicator taxa. Understanding which traits are related to sensitivity to habitat change is vital because sensitivity is important in determining a taxon's ability to survive in dynamic environments.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1523-1739.2009.01208.xDOI Listing

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