Agricultural management has a great influence on biodiversity and its services in agroecosystems. In Europe, a relevant proportion of biodiversity is dependent on low-input agriculture. To assess the effects of agricultural management on biodiversity, in this study we surveyed the communities of arable plants, diurnal flying insects, and pollinators in three conventional and in two organic fields of a traditional Elephant garlic (Allium ampeloprasum L.) crop of the Valdichiana area, in Tuscany (central Italy). The sampling was carried out twice along the season: in spring, during crop growing, and in summer, after crop harvesting. We assessed the effects of the different agricultural management on the richness and composition (species occurrence and abundance) of the three communities using univariate and multivariate analyses. Concerning our specific case study, Only plant species richness was significantly higher in organic fields (15.7±2.7 species per plot), compared to conventional ones (5.4±2.3 species per plot). Regarding community composition, only pollinators showed a marginally significant difference (p=0.06) between conventional and organic fields. Conversely, the effect of specific fields significantly explained differences in composition of all the investigated groups (plants and total insects: p<0.001; pollinators: p<0.01). The results suggest that, in our case study, the emerged differences in diversity of the investigated communities were mainly attributable to environmental and management factors related to single fields, more than to organic or conventional farming. Such evidence could be partly due to the very local scale of the study, to the heterogeneity of the surveyed fields, and to the reduced number of surveyed fields. Further investigation is therefore needed.

Effects of conventional and organic management on plant and insect communities in a traditional elephant garlic crop

Giovanni Bacaro
;
2022-01-01

Abstract

Agricultural management has a great influence on biodiversity and its services in agroecosystems. In Europe, a relevant proportion of biodiversity is dependent on low-input agriculture. To assess the effects of agricultural management on biodiversity, in this study we surveyed the communities of arable plants, diurnal flying insects, and pollinators in three conventional and in two organic fields of a traditional Elephant garlic (Allium ampeloprasum L.) crop of the Valdichiana area, in Tuscany (central Italy). The sampling was carried out twice along the season: in spring, during crop growing, and in summer, after crop harvesting. We assessed the effects of the different agricultural management on the richness and composition (species occurrence and abundance) of the three communities using univariate and multivariate analyses. Concerning our specific case study, Only plant species richness was significantly higher in organic fields (15.7±2.7 species per plot), compared to conventional ones (5.4±2.3 species per plot). Regarding community composition, only pollinators showed a marginally significant difference (p=0.06) between conventional and organic fields. Conversely, the effect of specific fields significantly explained differences in composition of all the investigated groups (plants and total insects: p<0.001; pollinators: p<0.01). The results suggest that, in our case study, the emerged differences in diversity of the investigated communities were mainly attributable to environmental and management factors related to single fields, more than to organic or conventional farming. Such evidence could be partly due to the very local scale of the study, to the heterogeneity of the surveyed fields, and to the reduced number of surveyed fields. Further investigation is therefore needed.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11368/3018733
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