Abstract

Covering about 40% of Earth’s land surface and sustaining at least 38% of global population, drylands are key crop and animal production regions with high economic and social values. However, land use changes associated with industrialized agricultural managements are threatening the sustainability of these systems. While previous studies assessing the impacts of agricultural management systems on biodiversity and their services focused on more diversified mesic landscapes, there is a dearth of such research in highly simplified dryland agroecosystems. In this paper, we 1) summarize previous research on the effects of farm management systems and agricultural expansion on biodiversity and biodiversity-based ecosystem services, 2) present four case studies assessing the impacts of management systems on biodiversity and ecosystem services across highly simplified dryland landscapes of the Northern Great Plains (NGP), USA, 3) discuss approaches to sustain biodiversity-based ecosystem services in drylands, and 4) present a conceptual framework for enhancing agricultural sustainability in the drylands through research, policy, economic valuation, and adaptive management. An analysis of the land use changes due to agricultural expansion within the Golden Triangle, a representative agricultural area in the NGP, indicated that the proportion of land conversion to agriculture area was 84%, 8%, and 7% from grassland, riparian, and shrubland habitats, respectively. Our results showed this simplification was associated with a potential reduction of pollination services. Also, our economic analysis projected that if 30% parasitism could be achieved through better management systems, the estimated potential economic returns to pest regulation services through parasitoids in Montana, USA alone could reach about $11.23 million. Overall, while dryland agroecosystems showed a significant loss of native biodiversity and its services, greater pest incidence, and a decrease in plant pollinator networks, these trends were moderately reversed in organically managed farming systems. In conclusion, although land use changes due to agricultural expansion and industrialized farming threaten the sustainability of dryland agroecosystems, this impact can be partially offset by coupling ecologically-based farming practices with adaptive management strategies.

Highlights

  • Drylands are regions with an aridity index of 0.05 to 0.65 [1]

  • We focus on the impact of agricultural management systems on biodiversity and ecosystem services in highly simplified dryland landscapes, with an emphasis on the Northern Great Plains (NGP), one of the leading dryland agricultural regions in the world [29,30,31,32,33]

  • Crops growing as volunteer weeds were the main contributors to forb diversity in the sampled organic crop fields. These results indicate that land use changes due to agricultural expansion and management systems adversely influence plant biodiversity; volunteer crop plants and other forbs contributed to the plant diversity observed during the growing season in organic crop fields

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Summary

Background

Drylands are regions with an aridity index (ratio of precipitation to potential evapotranspiration) of 0.05 to 0.65 [1]. There is a dearth of research into the impacts of agricultural expansion and management systems on biodiversity and ecosystem services in simplified dryland landscapes [24,25,26]. These systems are projected to expand to 48% of global land by 2025 due to the changing climate [27]. Antennaria neglecta Greene Heterotheca villosa (Pursh) Shinners Cirsium undulatum (Nutt.) Spreng. Tetraneuris acaulis (Pursh) Greene Sphaeralcea coccinea (Nutt.) Rydb. Nothocalais cuspidata (Pursh) Greene Symphyotrichum ericoides (L.) G.L. Nesom var. Pansum (S.F. Blake) G.L. Nesom Machaeranthera pinnatifida (Hook.) Shinners Ratibida columnifera (Nutt.) Wooton & Stand. Meeuse & Smi Artemisia cana Pursh Rosa arkansana Porter Rosa acicularis Lindl.

Management Systems and Associated Plant Diversity
Management Systems and Bee Colony Success
Findings
Management Systems and Bee–Flower Networks
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