Description
Land-use change and agricultural intensification concurrently impact natural enemy (e.g., parasitoid) communities and their associated ecosystem services (ESs), i.e., biological pest control. However, the extent to which (on-farm) parasitoid diversity and food webs mediate landscape-level influences on biological control remains poorly understood. Here, drawing upon a 3-year study of quantitative parasitoid-hyperparasitoid trophic networks from 25 different agro-landscapes, we assess the cascading effects of landscape composition, species diversity and trophic network structure on ecosystem functionality (i.e., parasitism, hyperparasitism). Path analysis further reveals causality leading to the biological control of a resident crop pest, i.e., Aphis gossypii. Functionality is dictated by (hyper)parasitoid diversity, with its effects modulated by food web generality and vulnerability. Non-crop habitat cover directly benefits biological control, whereas secondary crop cover indirectly lowers hyperparasitism. Our work underscores a need to simultaneously account for on-farm biodiversity and trophic interactions when investigating ESs within dynamic agro-landscapes.
| Date made available | 29 Aug 2021 |
|---|---|
| Publisher | Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences |
Research output
- 1 Article
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Species diversity and food web structure jointly shape natural biological control in agricultural landscapes
Yang, F., Liu, B., Zhu, Y., Wyckhuys, K. A. G., van der Werf, W. & Lu, Y., 18 Aug 2021, In: Communications Biology. 4, 1, 979.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Academic › peer-review
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