Abstract:
Agricultural intensification can result in extremely fragmented landscapes with typically
only small natural areas remaining. The South African macadamia industry is expanding
dramatically, with over 5000 ha planted per year. Remaining natural vegetation around
macadamia orchards will be key to retain important ecosystem services such as biological
pest control of insects provided by, amongst others, insectivorous bats. We evaluated how
the activity of bat species on macadamia farms within different land-use mosaics is related
to general insect abundance and what role the phenological stages of macadamias play.
Recordings of bat echolocation and insect light trap collections were conducted (July 2019 –
March 2020) at different edges of land-use types on two macadamia farms in Hazyview,South
Africa. Results showed that edge type significantly influenced bat activity and insect abundance with natural vegetation edges recording the highest bat activity (n = 3153) and insect
abundance (n = 16 524). River edges (bat n = 1635, insect n = 11 284) presented lower activity
and abundance than natural edges but still double that of road edges (bat n = 695, insect
n = 3743). Bat activity was also higher during developing-nut and mature phenology stages
when pest insects peak. Bats from all foraging guilds were recorded during the study,
which points towards a more intact bat assemblage within the study area compared to other
macadamia areas in South Africa. Our study highlights the importance of retaining natural
vegetation within an agricultural land-use mosaic to maintain biological pest control.