Abstract
AbstractAimAgriculture is one of the greatest pressures on biodiversity. Regional studies have shown that the presence of natural habitat and landscape heterogeneity are beneficial for biodiversity in agriculture, but it remains unclear whether their importance varies geographically. Here, we use local biodiversity data to determine which local and landscape variables are most associated with biodiversity patterns and whether their association varies between tropical and nonâtropical regions.LocationGlobal terrestrial area in forest biomes.Major taxa studiedMore than 21,000 species of vertebrates, invertebrates, plants and other taxa.MethodsWe used generalized linear mixedâeffects models to analyse the relationships between either community total abundance or species richness (derived from the PREDICTS database) and a number of siteâlevel (predominant land use and landâuse intensity) and landscapeâlevel variables (distance to forest, the percentage of natural habitat in the surrounding landscape, landscape homogeneity, the number of landâcover types in the landscape, and total fertilizer application). We compared the associations of these variables with biodiversity in tropical and nonâtropical regions.ResultsIn most cases, changes in biodiversity associated with landscapeâlevel variables were greater than those associated with local land use and landâuse intensity. Increased natural habitat availability was associated with the most consistent increases in biodiversity. Landscape homogeneity was also important but showed different directions of biodiversity change between regions. Associations with fertilizer application or the number of landâcover types were generally weaker, although still of greater magnitude than for the local landâuse measures.Main conclusionsOur results highlight similarities and differences in the association of localâ and landscapeâscale variables with local biodiversity in tropical and nonâtropical regions. Landscape natural habitat availability had a consistent positive association with biodiversity, highlighting the key role of landscape management in the maintenance of biodiversity in croplands. Landscapeâscale variables were almost always associated with greater changes in biodiversity than the localâscale measures.
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