Smallholder agriculture in African dryland agroecosystems has limited impact on trophic group composition, but affects arthropod provision of ecosystem services
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Date
Authors
Birkhofer, Klaus
Bird, Tharina L.
Alfeus, Martha
Arvidsson, Fredrik
Buxton, Mmabaledi
Djoudi, El Aziz
Fabiano, Ezequiel
Kasinda, Eva
Machekano, Honest
Mpofu, Precious
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Agricultural intensification is a major driver of biodiversity loss, but the majority of studies highlighting these
threats come from industrialised agriculture in temperate countries of the global North. However, more than
30% of global food production is produced by smallholder farmers, particularly in Africa. We know very little
about the impact of these farming practices on arthropod communities and associated ecosystems in dryland
agroecosystems. We investigated the trophic group composition of arthropod communities (detritivorous, her-
bivorous, predatory & mixed feeders) and levels of associated ecosystem functions in replicated maize fields,
paired adjacent natural bushveld habitats and the edge habitats between them in north-eastern Namibia and
central-eastern Botswana during the dry and wet seasons. Predator activity densities differed significantly be-
tween habitats depending on the season, with higher numbers in natural habitats in the wet season but lower
numbers in the dry season compared to maize fields. In general, edge habitats had higher numbers of predators
than the other habitats. Predator attack rates on artificial caterpillars in both seasons and dung removal in the
wet season were higher in habitats with natural vegetation (natural and edge). However, dung removal in the dry
season and herbivory in the wet season were highest in the maize fields, the latter due to high level of fall
armyworm infestation. Wet season multifunctionality was higher in natural habitats in Botswana, and to a lesser
extent in Namibia, than in maize fields. Smallholder agriculture is not detrimental to decomposers, herbivores
and mixed feeders compared to adjacent natural habitats, but may be detrimental to the provision of some
ecosystem services. These results highlight the challenge of sustainably managing dryland agricultural land that
is marginal for crop production, while providing smallholders with an optimal environment to benefit from the
ecosystem services associated with arthropod communities. New conservation agriculture practices need to
support the production of higher and more stable yields over time, while maintaining the limited impact of
smallholder agriculture on biotic communities.
Description
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT : Data will be made available on request.
Keywords
Artificial caterpillars, Biological control, Dung removal, Herbivory, Multifunctionality, Seed predation, SDG-02: Zero hunger, SDG-15: Life on land
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-02:Zero Hunger
SDG-15:Life on land
SDG-15:Life on land
Citation
Birkhofer, K., Bird, T.L., Alfeus, M. et al. 2024, 'Smallholder agriculture in African dryland agroecosystems has limited
impact on trophic group composition, but affects arthropod provision of
ecosystem services', Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment, vol. 363, art. 20240401, pp. 1-11, doi : 10.1016/j.agee.2023.108860.