Multi-species crop mixtures increase insect biodiversity in an
intercropping experiment
Abstract
Recent biodiversity declines require action across sectors such as
agriculture. The situation is particularly acute for arthropods, a
species-rich taxon providing important ecosystem services. To counteract
negative consequences of agricultural intensification, creating a less
hostile agricultural “matrix” through growing crop mixtures can reduce
harm for arthropods without yield losses. While grassland biodiversity
experiments showed positive plant biodiversity effects on arthropods,
experiments manipulating crop diversity and management intensity to
study arthropods are lacking. Here, we experimentally manipulated crop
diversity (1-3 species, fallows), crop species (wheat, faba bean,
linseed, oilseed rape) and agrochemical input (high vs. low) and studied
responses of arthropod biodiversity. Increasing crop diversity increased
arthropod diversity and arthropod numbers. Mass-flowering crops
attracted more arthropods than legumes or cereals. Integrating
intercropping into agricultural systems could lead to a massive increase
in flower visits (up to 15 million visits/ha), indicating benefits of
intercropping for insect biodiversity and associated ecosystem services.