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Local management and landscape drivers of pollination and biological control services in a Kenyan agro-ecosystem
Authors:Mark Otieno  Ben A Woodcock  Andrew Wilby  Ioannis N Vogiatzakis  Alice L Mauchline  Mary W Gikungu  Simon G Potts
Institution:aCentre for Agri-Environmental Research, School of Agriculture, Policy and Development, University of Reading, Earley Gate, Reading RG6 6AR, United Kingdom;bNERC Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, Maclean Building, Crowmarsh Gifford, Wallingford, Oxfordshire OX10 8BB, United Kingdom;cLancaster Environment Centre, University of Lancaster, Bailrigg, Lancaster LA1 4YQ, United Kingdom;dZoology Department, Invertebrate Zoology Section, P.O. Box 40658, 00100 GPO, Nairobi, Kenya;eSchool of Pure & Applied Sciences, Open University of Cyprus, 13-15 Digeni Akrita Avenue, Adamantio Building, 1055 Nicosia, P.O. Box 24801, 1304 Nicosia, Cyprus
Abstract:Arthropods that have a direct impact on crop production (i.e. pests, natural enemies and pollinators) can be influenced by both local farm management and the context within which the fields occur in the wider landscape. However, the contributions and spatial scales at which these drivers operate and interact are not fully understood, particularly in the developing world. The impact of both local management and landscape context on insect pollinators and natural enemy communities and on their capacity to deliver related ecosystem services to an economically important tropical crop, pigeonpea was investigated. The study was conducted in nine paired farms across a gradient of increasing distance to semi-native vegetation in Kibwezi, Kenya. Results show that proximity of fields to semi-native habitats negatively affected pollinator and chewing insect abundance. Within fields, pesticide use was a key negative predictor of pollinator, pest and foliar active predator abundance. On the contrary, fertilizer application significantly enhanced pollinator and both chewing and sucking insect pest abundance. At a 1 km spatial scale of fields, there were significant negative effects of the number of semi-native habitat patches within fields dominated by mass flowering pigeonpea on pollinators abundance. For service provision, a significant decline in fruit set when insects were excluded from flowers was recorded. This study reveals the interconnections of pollinators, predators and pests with pigeonpea crop. For sustainable yields and to conserve high densities of both pollinators and predators of pests within pigeonpea landscapes, it is crucial to target the adoption of less disruptive farm management practices such as reducing pesticide and fertilizer inputs.
Keywords:Bio-control  Farm management  Fruit set  Landscape context  Pollination  The developing world
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