ARPHA Conference Abstracts : Conference Abstract
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Corresponding author: Ezequiel González (ezenofx@gmail.com)
Received: 11 Jun 2019 | Published: 14 Jun 2019
© 2019 Ezequiel González, Miroslav Seidl, Martin Štrobl, Tomáš Kadlec, Marco Ferrante, Michal Knapp
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Citation: González E, Seidl M, Štrobl M, Kadlec T, Ferrante M, Knapp M (2019) Pest and weed seed predation in field defects within oilseed rape crops. ARPHA Conference Abstracts 2: e37075. https://doi.org/10.3897/aca.2.e37075
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Non-crop habitats can act as refuge for insects in agricultural landscapes and increase ecosystem services (ESs) in neighboring arable fields. Among the different types of non-crop habitats, field defects are temporary patches where sown plants are poorly developed and other plant species emerge. These defects can be common and large in years with extreme weather conditions. However, their relevance as habitat for beneficial insects and ESs provision is unknown. Here, we quantified two ESs (pest and weed seed predation) in field defects within oilseed rape crops and related ESs levels with the activity-density of ground beetles and temperature. In 10 fields, we used artificial caterpillars made of plasticine and seed cards of two weed species (Taraxacum sp. and Stellaria sp.) to quantify ESs in two sampling periods (spring and summer) and in three habitat types: field defects, standardly grown crop (field interiors) and crop-defect boundaries. Ground beetles were sampled using pitfall traps and classified into feeding guilds and body size classes. Insects and mammals were the main pest predators and predation increased in summer, but did not differ among habitats. Seed predation rates for both species were significantly higher in summer. Predation of Taraxacum seeds was higher at field interiors, whereas predation of Stellaria was significantly higher at field interiors and defects, compared to crop-defect boundaries. Insect predation increased with the activity-density of medium and large carnivorous carabids, whereas seed predation for both weed species was positively related to the activity-density of medium-sized herbivorous carabids. Finally, temperature was negatively linked to predation of artificial caterpillars and seeds of Taraxacum.
Biological control; Ephemeral habitats; Ground beetles; Non-crop habitats; Oilseed; Sentinel prey
Ezequiel Gonzalez
19thECM poster
Grant GAČR 18-26542S.
Faculty of Environmental Sciences, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Praha