Threadgill, Katie ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3021-7465, McClean, Colin, Hodgson, Jenny, Jones, Naomi and Hill, Jane
(2020)
Data from: Agri-environment conservation set-asides have co-benefits for connectivity.
[Data Collection]
Description
Widespread declines in farmland biodiversity have led to state-funded schemes which take land out of production to create (semi-)natural habitats for biodiversity (e.g. EU agri-environment schemes; US Conservation Reserve Program). Common features of such schemes are grassland strips at the edges of agricultural fields, and we examine potential co-benefits of these biodiversity set-asides for contributing to grassland connectivity. Although set-aside strips had negligible impact on landscape-scale species persistence (using metapopulation models parameterized for flying insects run on 267 landscapes of ~30 000 ha across England), they nonetheless improved connectivity in 74% (198/267) of landscapes (comparing landscapes with and without set-asides), as shown by range expansion rates increasing by up to 100%. Benefits of set-aside strips varied according to species type (high/low dispersal, high/low population density), but had little benefit for species with low dispersal and small population sizes, which enerally failed to expand. High dispersal/high density species were already successful expanders regardless of set-asides (> 75% of simulations were successful without set-sides) although expansion rates were still improved when set-asides were added. Whilst alternative strategies for placement of set-aside strips (more/less aggregated), revealed no consensus ‘better’ strategy across species types, set-aside benefits were generally greatest in landscapes with intermediate availability of semi-natural grassland (0.5-4% over). We conclude that small-scale set-asides have the potential to improve connectivity, which we expect to help some species track climate change, and connect habitat patches within existing climate space for others. However, set-asides are unlikely to benefit low dispersal species which are probably at greatest risk from agricultural intensification.
Keywords: | Dryad, |
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Depositing User: | Data Catalogue Admin |
Date Deposited: | 26 Jan 2023 17:29 |
Last Modified: | 26 Jan 2023 18:44 |
DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.2z34tmpj4 |
Original Record Link: | https://datadryad.org/stash/share/4DioQKWNKEnCLEgg0jriGMXVdp5fzrucYycGwbx-3ug |
URI: | https://datacat.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/2012 |
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