Does hedgerow management on organic farms benefit small mammal populations?
Type de document
journalArticle
Langue source
Anglais
Titre français
Titre anglais
Does hedgerow management on organic farms benefit small mammal populations?
Auteur(s)
- BATES Felicity Sian
- HARRIS Stephen
Editeur(s)
Autre(s)
Id
ME94VRXU
Version
2762
Date ajout
5 janvier 2021 17:06
Date modification
5 janvier 2021 17:06
Résumé anglais
Organic farming is a whole-farm management approach believed to encourage biodiversity by excluding the input of agrochemicals and introducing specific management regimes for non-crop habitats. We examined the impact of the hedgerow management regime encouraged for organic farms on small mammal populations, since small mammal numbers influence a range of species at higher trophic levels and, in particular, are key to the conservation of a range of mammalian and avian predators. We compared differences in management and structure of non-crop habitats at the farm-scale between organic and conventional farms, and used within-farm variations in hedgerow size to predict the effect of hedgerow size on small mammals on both farm types. There were no significant differences in the proportion of non-crop habitats between organic and conventional farms, although management differences produced larger hedgerows on organic farms and greater diversity of hedgerow growth stages. However, a difference in hedgerow size between the farm types did not have a significant effect on small mammal abundance or diversity. We conclude that increased hedgerow size is not benefiting small mammal populations on organic farms: significant gains in small mammal numbers may be more effectively achieved by increasing the area of non-crop habitats rather than by improving management regimes.
Note
None
CRAW tags
- AB - Spécifique
- FREDO durabilité
- FREDO environnement
- GEO Royaume-Uni
- biodiversité
- service écosystémique
WEB tags
Pages
7
Date caractères
2009
Date publication
1 janvier 2009