4.8 Article

Land-use history impacts functional diversity across multiple trophic groups

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1910023117

Keywords

agricultural ecosystems; biodiversity loss; functional diversity; grasslands; land-use changes

Funding

  1. French government Initiatives d'Excellence-Initiatives Science/Innovation/Territoires/Economie (IDEX-ISITE) initiative [16-IDEX-0001 (CAP 20-25)]
  2. FarmLand research programme, an European Research Area Net (ERA-Net) BiodivERsA project - French Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR-11-EBID-0004]
  3. Enhancing biodiversity-based ecosystem services to crops through optimized densities of green infrastructure in agricultural landscapes (ECODEAL) research programme, 2013-2014 BiodivERsA/Agriculture, Food Security AMP
  4. Climate Change (FACCE-JPI)
  5. Agence Nationale de la Recherche
  6. Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung
  7. Swedish Research Council for Environment (FORMAS) [2014-1783]
  8. Fonds zur Forderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung
  9. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad
  10. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO)
  11. Projekttrager im Deutschen Zentrum fur Luft-und Raumfahrt (PT-DLR)
  12. region Poitou-Charentes-department Deux-Sevres PhD grant
  13. AgreenSkills+ fellowship programme from the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme [FP7-609398]
  14. European Research Council (BIODESERT)
  15. Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions Individual Fellowship (MSCA-IF) within the European Program Horizon 2020 (Linking plant functional diversity to ecosystem multifunctionality in arid systems worldwide [DRYFUN] Project) [656035]
  16. European Research Council (ERC) Starting Grant Project ecophysiological and biophysical constraints on domestication in crop plants [ERC-StG-2014-639706-CONSTRAINTS]

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Land-use change is a major driver of biodiversity loss worldwide. Although biodiversity often shows a delayed response to land-use change, previous studies have typically focused on a narrow range of current landscape factors and have largely ignored the role of land-use history in shaping plant and animal communities and their functional characteristics. Here, we used a unique database of 220,000 land-use records to investigate how 20-y of land-use changes have affected functional diversity across multiple trophic groups (primary producers, mutualists, herbivores, invertebrate predators, and vertebrate predators) in 75 grassland fields with a broad range of land-use histories. The effects of land-use history on multitrophic trait diversity were as strong as other drivers known to impact biodiversity, e.g., grassland management and current landscape composition. The diversity of animal mobility and resource-acquisition traits was lower in landscapes where much of the land had been historically converted from grassland to crop. In contrast, functional biodiversity was higher in landscapes containing old permanent grasslands, most likely because they offer a stable and high-quality habitat refuge for species with low mobility and specialized feeding niches. Our study shows that grassland-to-crop conversion has long-lasting impacts on the functional biodiversity of agricultural ecosystems. Accordingly, land-use legacy effects must be considered in conservation programs aiming to protect agricultural biodiversity. In particular, the retention of permanent grassland sanctuaries within intensive landscapes may offset ecological debts.

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