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Agro‐ecosystem services and dis‐services in almond orchards are differentially influenced by the surrounding landscape
Author(s) -
SCHÄCKERMANN JESSICA,
PUFAL GESINE,
MANDELIK YAEL,
KLEIN ALEXANDRAMARIA
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
ecological entomology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.865
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1365-2311
pISSN - 0307-6946
DOI - 10.1111/een.12244
Subject(s) - ecosystem services , habitat , orchard , predation , abundance (ecology) , biology , agriculture , ecology , ecosystem , agroforestry
1. The simultaneous influence of specific habitats on agro‐ecosystem services, dis‐services, and their interactions are largely unknown. Natural and semi‐natural habitats surrounding cropland may support ecosystem services and dis‐services and their net balance is important to guide decision‐making in agriculture. 2. It was tested how natural and semi‐natural habitats surrounding almond orchards in Israel influence: pest control services by parasitoids, pest predation dis‐services by the A lmond wasp, and seed predation dis‐services by granivorous birds. The latter could provide sanitation services when consuming almonds infested by A lmond wasps after harvest. 3. Seventeen almond orchards were surveyed, surrounded by varying percentages of natural and semi‐natural habitats. We harvested almonds to identify A lmond wasp infestation and parasitoid abundance, monitored bird‐feeding marks, and observed birds. 4. Almond wasp predation was positively influenced by semi‐natural habitat and highest at orchard edges. Parasitoid abundance was not influenced by natural or semi‐natural habitats. Granivorous bird abundance was negatively influenced by semi‐natural habitats but did not influence bird seed predation of harvestable or overwintered almonds. 5. Natural habitats did not influence the studied ecosystem services or dis‐services in almond orchards in Israel. Therefore, protecting natural habitats for conservation is not necessarily disadvantageous for farmers. Semi‐natural habitats increased insect pests, but no direct link to services or dis‐services by birds was observed. Therefore, a more holistic approach by accounting for several services and dis‐services and their connection to different habitat types to manage agriculture more sustainably is advocated.