Abstract

AbstractPredation on pest organisms is an essential ecosystem function supporting yields in modern agriculture. However, assessing predation rates is intricate, and they can rarely be linked directly to predator densities or functions. We tested whether sentinel prey aphid cards are useful tools to assess predation rates in the field. Therefore, we looked at aphid cards of different sizes on the ground level as well as within the vegetation. Additionally, by trapping ground‐dwelling predators, we examined whether obtained predation rates could be linked to predator densities and traits. Predation rates recorded with aphid cards were independent of aphid card size. However, predation rates on the ground level were three times higher than within the vegetation. We found both predatory carabid activity densities as well as community weighted mean body size to be good predictors for predation rates. Predation rates obtained from aphid cards are stable over card type and related to predator assemblages. Aphid cards, therefore, are a useful, efficient method for rapidly assessing the ecosystem function predation. Their use might especially be recommended for assessments on the ground level and when time and resource limitations rule out more elaborate sentinel prey methods using exclosures with living prey animals.

Highlights

  • Pests remain a severe burden for modern agriculture and with cli‐ mate change pressuring crops, enhancing natural pest control is essential both to control pests and to limit pesticide use and their negative impact on the environment (Deutsch et al, 2018; Savary et al, 2019)

  • We investigate the effects of card size and posi‐ tioning of the sentinel prey card within the field on the resulting predation rates

  • To assess whether predation rates could be linked to preda‐ tor assemblage characteristics, we calculated predation rates on the ground level over all card sizes and intervals

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Summary

Introduction

Pests remain a severe burden for modern agriculture and with cli‐ mate change pressuring crops, enhancing natural pest control is essential both to control pests and to limit pesticide use and their negative impact on the environment (Deutsch et al, 2018; Savary et al, 2019). Disperse and forage on different vegetation levels and are there‐ fore potentially affected by different predator guilds (Dainese, Schneider, Krauss, & Steffan‐Dewenter, 2017), assessing preda‐ tion rates on different levels could unravel important information about pest control. It remains unclear whether the same methods are suitable for assessing predation rates on ground and the vegetation level

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