Testing the effectiveness of surrogates for assessing biological diversity of arthropods in cereal agricultural landscapes |
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Institution: | 1. Moscow Pedagogical State University, Moscow 129164, Russia;2. Forest Research Institute, Karelian Research Center, Russian Academy of Sciences, Petrozavodsk 185910, Russia |
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Abstract: | Agricultural intensification is altering biodiversity patterns worldwide. Rapid and effective methods are needed to monitor these changes in farmland biodiversity, but it becomes both a cost- and time-prohibitive task, particularly for hyper-diverse groups such as arthropods. We evaluated the effectiveness of surrogates in irrigated and rainfed wheat fields in a Mediterranean farmland in NW Spain in order to get a rapid tool to assess arthropod biodiversity. We studied six groups with different ecological needs (i.e. Aphididae, Aphidiinae, Coccinellidae, Formicidae, Heteroptera and Syrphidae) at species level (147 species), genus (105), family (10, only Heteroptera) and order (19) level. Higher taxa, cross-taxa and subset-taxa or total richness approaches were tested as well as the correlation in composition between levels for the selected groups, and the influence of farming regime. Genus richness was a good surrogate of species richness in all six groups studied (R2 = 0.38–0.60), like family and order were for Heteroptera (R2 = 0.37 and 0.29, respectively). Cross-taxa analyses showed that Aphididae and Aphidiinae genera (R2 = 0.19 and 0.30, respectively) and species (R2 = 0.20 and 0.28, respectively) were good surrogates for Aphidiinae and Aphididae species respectively. Coccinellidae genera (R2 = 0.26) and species (R2 = 0.25) were good surrogates for Heteroptera species. Finally, Aphididae and Coccinellidae both at genera (R2 = 0.14 and 0.20, respectively) and at species levels (R2 = 0.12–0.22, respectively) were good surrogates for total species richness of all groups. Genera composition was the best surrogate for the species composition within each group. Farming regime had no influence on the relationships between surrogates and species patterns in most cases. Our results suggest that genera level is a useful surrogate for all the studied groups and family is appropriate for Heteroptera. Genus level provided a saving of 15% of identification time in Aphididae and 80% for Coccinellidae. This proves its usefulness to asses and monitor biodiversity in wheat croplands and the possibility to reduce costs. |
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Keywords: | Arthropod biodiversity Cereal pseudo-steppes Mediterranean landscape Species richness Surrogate taxa Wheat |
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