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Arable weeds in organically managed wheat fields foster carabid beetles by resource- and structure-mediated effects

Author

Summary, in English

Arable weeds in organically managed fields may foster arthropod generalist predators by the provision of shelter and favorable microclimate (structure-mediated effects) and the provision of additional animal and floral food resources (resource-mediated effects). In three organically managed winter wheat fields in Central Germany, we investigated the impact of weed removal and introduction of artificial weed-like structure on the activity density and species richness of carabid beetles with respect to trophic groups, microclimatic conditions, and densities of potential prey. Removal of weeds reduced both carabid activity density and species richness but did not affect trophic group composition. The decline in carabid activity density was dampened by the addition of artificial structure. Mean daily surface temperature and light intensity were significantly lower under weeds and artificial plants than under wheat plants alone. Weed removal reduced the abundance of leafhoppers and true bugs, but the response was inconsistent across fields. We conclude that the presence of arable weeds in organically managed wheat fields fosters carabid activity density and species richness via resource-mediated effects, such as a higher availability of weed-borne resources (e.g. seeds and pollen) and herbivorous prey. Structure-mediated effects (altering the microclimate) add to this positive effect. The presence of weeds in organically managed wheat fields enhances carabid activity density and diversity and needs to be integrated into future management strategies for natural enemy conservation.

Publishing year

2012

Language

English

Pages

75-82

Publication/Series

Arthropod-Plant Interactions

Volume

6

Issue

1

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Springer

Topic

  • Ecology

Keywords

  • Carabidae
  • Organic farming
  • Biodiversity
  • Trophic interactions
  • Habitat complexity
  • Biological control

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1872-8855