Abstract

AbstractThe loss and fragmentation of natural habitats due to agricultural intensification have a strong negative impact on farmland biodiversity. The concomitant isolation of essential resources may exert selection pressures toward increased dispersal performance in flying insects, possibly resulting in differences in flight morphology and dispersal propensity across landscapes. Here, we compared condition, flight morphology, dispersal capacity, and propensity of the common butterfly Pieris rapae among four pairs of highly fragmented “modern” and less fragmented “traditional” agricultural landscapes. We did not find differences between landscape types, but between locations and sexes. These results are not entirely unexpected, as P. rapae is a highly mobile generalist species, able to exploit temporarily available resources such as rapeseed in modern agricultural landscapes. In addition, our negative results may suggest a lack of time for evolutionary change such that differences may appear in the future. However, more specialized species with low dispersal ability may show clearer patterns and may well suffer from habitat fragmentation, and investigating such interrelation is an important task for future research.

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