4.7 Article

When a pest is not a pest: Birds indirectly increase defoliation but have no effect on yield of soybean crops

Journal

ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
Volume 32, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eap.2527

Keywords

birds; crop yield; ecosystem disservice; soybeans; trophic cascade

Funding

  1. Institute for Environmental Science and Policy
  2. Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research, University of Illinois at Chicago
  3. Friends of Nachusa Grasslands

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Natural habitats near agricultural systems can provide both ecosystem services and disservices on farms. Birds can have complex effects on crops, ranging from positive to negative, and it is important to quantify these effects. This study in Illinois found that while birds may have released pests through intraguild predation, there was no net disservice when considering crop yield, the most important variable for stakeholders.
Natural habitats near agricultural systems can be sources of both ecosystem services and disservices on farms. Ecosystem disservices, those aspects of an ecosystem that have negative impacts on humans, may disproportionately affect conservation decisions made by farmers. Birds, in particular, can have complex effects on crops, ranging from positive to neutral to negative. Therefore, it is important to quantify them in a meaningful way. Birds may be more abundant on farms near natural areas and may provide ecosystem services by consuming insect pests. However, when birds consume beneficial predatory arthropods rather than pest species (intraguild predation), they can provide a disservice to the farmer if the intraguild predation decreases crop yield. We studied bird intraguild predation in Illinois (USA) at six soybean fields adjacent to grasslands that provided source habitat for bird populations. We placed cages over soybean crops, which excluded birds but allowed access to arthropods, and measured differences in leaf damage and crop yield of plants in control and exclosure plots. We also conducted point counts at each site to quantify the bird communities. We found that plants within the bird exclosures had lower levels of leaf damage by pests than those in control plots, but there was no resulting effect on crop yield. We also found that sites with higher bird abundance had higher levels of leaf damage by pests, but bird species richness was not a significant predictor of leaf damage. These results suggest that although birds may have released pests through intraguild predation, there was no net disservice when considering crop yield, the variable most important to stakeholders.

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