Abstract

Studies evaluating agri-environmental schemes (AES) usually focus on responses of single species or functional groups. Analyses are generally based on simple habitat measurements but ignore food availability and other important factors. This can limit our understanding of the ultimate causes determining the reactions of birds to AES. We investigated these issues in detail and throughout the main seasons of a bird's annual cycle (mating, postfledging and wintering) in a dry cereal farmland in a Special Protection Area for farmland birds in central Spain. First, we modeled four bird response parameters (abundance, species richness, diversity and “Species of European Conservation Concern” [SPEC]-score), using detailed food availability and vegetation structure measurements (food models). Second, we fitted new models, built using only substrate composition variables (habitat models). Whereas habitat models revealed that both, fields included and not included in the AES benefited birds, food models went a step further and included seed and arthropod biomass as important predictors, respectively, in winter and during the postfledging season. The validation process showed that food models were on average 13% better (up to 20% in some variables) in predicting bird responses. However, the cost of obtaining data for food models was five times higher than for habitat models. This novel approach highlighted the importance of food availability-related causal processes involved in bird responses to AES, which remained undetected when using conventional substrate composition assessment models. Despite their higher costs, measurements of food availability add important details to interpret the reactions of the bird community to AES interventions and thus facilitate evaluating the real efficiency of AES programs.

Highlights

  • The demand of more food and biofuel (Tilman et al 2011; Miyake et al 2012) from modern agricultural activities has caused the decline of many species inhabiting farmland areas (Donald et al 2001)

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • Bird abundance was positively predicted by seed biomass found in agri-environmental schemes (AES) legume fields, surface of AES fallows and ploughed fields, and surface of non-AES cereal stubbles (Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

The demand of more food and biofuel (Tilman et al 2011; Miyake et al 2012) from modern agricultural activities has caused the decline of many species inhabiting farmland areas (Donald et al 2001). The European Union and the United States of America have spent several billion dollars in AES programs (Kleijn et al 2006; Gabriel et al 2010), but their effectiveness is still somehow questioned because different studies have reported contradictory results (Tscharntke et al 2005; Kleijn et al 2006) These differences may have been due to differences in the scale of study, with most clearly positive effects at local scales (Perkins et al 2011) compared with larger scales (Verhulst et al 2007; Davey et al 2010), or in studies designed to enhance certain declining species (Wilson et al 2009; Kleijn et al 2011).

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