2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2664.2006.01270.x
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How landscape structure, land‐use intensity and habitat diversity affect components of total arthropod diversity in agricultural landscapes

Abstract: Summary 1.Agricultural intensification poses a serious threat to biodiversity as a consequence of increased land-use intensity, decreased landscape heterogeneity and reduced habitat diversity. Although there is interest in the preservation of total species richness of an agricultural landscape ( γ diversity), the effects of intensification have been assessed primarily by species richness at a local scale ( α diversity). This ignores species richness between local communities ( β diversity), which is an importa… Show more

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Cited by 493 publications
(366 citation statements)
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“…Loss of apex arthropod predators (Hendrickx et al 2007;Shochat et al 2008), however, can have similar effects, with reduced predation increasing herbivore abundance but also lowering richness if one or a few herbivores dominate (Holt 1977;Oliver et al 2009). There may also be strong interactions between human-induced changes to resources and predators: nutrient enrichment may drive consumer birth rates that far exceed predator-driven herbivore mortality or may cause system instability by creating top-heavy feeding webs (Polis et al 1997;McCann 2011;Shurin et al 2012;Tunney et al 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Loss of apex arthropod predators (Hendrickx et al 2007;Shochat et al 2008), however, can have similar effects, with reduced predation increasing herbivore abundance but also lowering richness if one or a few herbivores dominate (Holt 1977;Oliver et al 2009). There may also be strong interactions between human-induced changes to resources and predators: nutrient enrichment may drive consumer birth rates that far exceed predator-driven herbivore mortality or may cause system instability by creating top-heavy feeding webs (Polis et al 1997;McCann 2011;Shurin et al 2012;Tunney et al 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In arthropods (see Chust et al, 2004;Holland et al, 2004;Clough et al, 2005;Gaucherel et al, 2007;Gonzá lez-Mejias et al, 2007;Hendrickx et al, 2007;Driscoll, 2008), such analysis can help to identify the spatial scales at which a predictor variable influences species richness and abundance of local communities.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The identification and classification of these macro structures by remote sensing is possible (e.g., Yang and Prince 2000;Ozesmi and Bauer 2002;Silvestri et al 2003;Mumby et al 2004;Harris and Bryant 2009) and quantitative assessments of biodiversity populations have also been made using the species-area relationship and extent of habitat derived from remote sensing (Turner et al 2003;Jha et al 2005). Other examples of the link between specific species and landscape indicators have been reported by Dormann et al (2007) and Hendrickx et al (2007). However, a reliable indication of the status and trends of biodiversity and ecosystem service provision beyond habitat mapping and based on remote sensing data, requires more research effort to validate the results.…”
Section: Developing Indicators For Ecosystem Service Monitoringmentioning
confidence: 99%