Abstract

Ladybeetles are promising contributors of biological control services in agricultural landscapes, potentially providing significant economic gains in agricultural production. In northern China, ladybeetles are the most common predators in the annual double-crop rotation system, where the dominant crops are wheat in the spring and maize and cotton in the summer. Land-use features at the landscape level affect ladybeetle populations in a number of ways, and our previous studies have estimated the effects of landscape composition on ladybeetles abundance in wheat and cotton fields in northern China. However, these landscape effects on ladybeetle abundance in maize remain insufficiently documented in this specific agro-ecosystem. We assessed the relationships between ladybeetle abundance and landscape composition at four spatial scales (0.5, 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0 km) in a summer maize system at the whorl stage (the main period for ladybeetle colonization). We found that both semi-natural habitats (woodlots and grasslands) and vegetation around water bodies increased the abundance of ladybeetles in maize fields, and maize area played a dilution effect on ladybeetle abundance in this crop. These non-crop habitats might serve as source of emigrants that disperse to maize fields. The smallest scale (0.5 km) studied was the most predictive spatial scale in this colonization period for ladybeetles. Propylaea japonica, the dominant ladybeetle, showed response to landscape variables in a similar way as the whole ladybeetle population did. These findings suggest that leaving some non-crop habitats and reducing human disturbance to this vegetation within a landscape will enhance ladybeetle abundance in maize fields. Consistent with our previous studies in wheat and cotton fields in the same system, maintaining the continuity in time and space of functional habitats was essential for the persistence of ladybeetle populations within the landscape. In the future, habitat management and landscape design to ensure resource continuity should be encouraged to maximize the conservation of ladybeetles in agricultural ecosystems in northern China.

Full Text
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