
Quantifying the effect of organic farming, field boundary type and
landscape structure on the vegetation of field boundaries
Tsipe Aavik1,2 and Jaan Liira2
Abstract
The general aim of the study was to determine the main factors of plant
species richness and composition in field boundaries. We surveyed the
vegetation of field boundaries in organic and non-organic farms, recorded
the field boundary type and width. We characterized landscape structure
around the vegetation plots (r = 250 m). We classified plant species
into two ecological response groups: (1) common weeds and other species
occurring frequently on agricultural land, i.e. ‘agrotolerant
species’ (47 species), and (2) all other species intolerant to
contemporary agricultural practices—so-called ‘nature-value
species’ (190 species). We analysed the effect of organic farming,
boundary type and landscape structure on the diversity of these two
species groups.
We found that field boundary type and landscape structure described
most of the variation in species composition of these boundaries, while
organic farming had little effect. However, the analysis of plant species
diversity revealed that organic farming significantly supported the
species richness of high nature-value species by increasing species
richness on average by two species on 4 m2 plot, while the richness
of agrotolerant species did not depend on farming type. Boundary type
had a specific impact on species diversity—ditches enhanced the
richness of nature-value species and suppressed agrotolerants; woody
boundaries hosted only a few agrotolerant species and road verges increased
the species richness of both species groups. The richness of nature-value
species benefited from wider open boundaries, while narrow boundaries
hosted more agrotolerant species.
Source
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment (2010) 135: 178-186
Author Locations & Affiliations
(1) Institute of Integrative Biology, Department of Environmental Sciences,
ETH Zürich, Universitätstrasse 16, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland
(2) Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences, Department
of Botany, University of Tartu, 40 Lai St., Tartu 51005, Estonia
en français
Posted November 2009
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