4.2 Article

Agricultural land use affects the heterogeneity of Odonata communities in the Brazilian Pampa

Journal

JOURNAL OF INSECT CONSERVATION
Volume 26, Issue 3, Pages 503-514

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10841-021-00349-0

Keywords

Agricultural encroachment; Aquatic insects; Beta diversity; Biotic homogenization; Dragonfly; Subtropical grasslands

Funding

  1. CAPES [88887.125260/2015-00, PVE 95/2015]
  2. CNPq [307303/2019-5]

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Expansion of farming has negative impacts on freshwater biodiversity, with effects varying across taxa and regions. Research on the effects of agricultural expansion in the Neotropics, particularly in South American grasslands, is limited. The study found that landscape modification due to increased agricultural land use was associated with taxonomic homogenization in odonate communities in waterbodies within the Brazilian Pampa region, highlighting the importance of maintaining mixed-grassland and cropland land uses to limit negative effects on Odonata communities.
Farming expansion has negative impacts on freshwater biodiversity. However, the effects of agricultural land use are not similar across taxa and depend on local context. For instance, the impacts of agricultural expansion are understudied in the Neotropics (one of the leading regions in cropland expansion). Knowledge of the effects of agricultural land use on aquatic insects from South American subtropical grasslands (Pampa) is even more incipient. We tested whether landscape modification related to increased agricultural land use was associated with taxonomic homogenization in odonate communities in waterbodies in the Brazilian Pampa. Odonates were collected in waterbodies differing in the main land-use class in their surroundings (cropland or grassland). Cropland and grassland sites differed with respect to their abiotic conditions (water chemistry) and species composition of Odonata. Additionally, we found higher variation in the composition of Odonata (and suborders Anisoptera and Zygoptera separately) in grassland than cropland sites. We found an interplay between agricultural and grassland land uses and the variation in the composition of odonate communities in the Brazilian Pampa. Specifically, landscape modification by agriculture modified the abiotic conditions in the waterbodies, which may have favored species able to establish as larvae under harsher environmental conditions. Implications for insect conservation We suggest that the maintenance of mixed-grassland and cropland land uses in the fields adjacent to waterbodies can limit the negative effects of agricultural encroachment on Odonata communities with respect to biotic homogenization in the Brazilian Pampa.

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