Vegetation Cover Management and Landscape Plant Species Composition Influence the Chrysopidae Community in the Olive Agroecosystem
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Alcalá Herrera, Rafael; Ramos Font, María Eugenia; Fernández Sierra, María Luisa; Ruano Díaz, Francisca Del CarmenEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Ecological infrastructures Cover crops Patch vegetation Olea europaea Chrysoperla Apertochrysa Pseudomallada
Date
2022-11-27Referencia bibliográfica
Alcalá Herrera, R... [et al.]. Vegetation CoverManagement and Landscape Plant Species Composition Influence the Chrysopidae Community in the Olive Agroecosystem. Plants 2022, 11, 3255. [https://doi.org/10.3390/plants11233255]
Patrocinador
Junta de Andalucía (project P12-AGR-1419); postdoctoral contract; University of Jaén (ACCION 1_PAIUJA 2019–2020: RNM350)Résumé
Habitat manipulation through the promotion of semi-natural habitats such as cover and
patch vegetation is a possible means of offsetting the negative impacts of the agricultural practices.
A baseline situation is crucial before any successful habitat manipulation is attempted. We studied
the effects that current vegetation cover management practices have on plant composition and
the potential attraction that the plant families from the semi-natural habitats could have on the
Chrysopidae community, a key pest control agent, in five olive farms in Granada (Spain). Vegetation
cover was assessed using a point quadrat methodology in eight transects per farm. In addition,
the patch vegetation was characterized with 60 transects using a line intercept methodology. The
woody patch vegetation and olive tree canopies were vacuumed using a field aspirator to collect
adult Chrysopidae. In the cover vegetation we observed great variability in both the richness and
diversity of plant communities caused by the vegetation cover management techniques and the
transect position (in the middle of the rows or beneath the tree canopy). The plant families with
the greatest plant cover were the Asteraceae and Fabaceae, where Asteraceae was favoured by
tillage and Fabaceae by grazing, while in the patch vegetation, the predominant families were the
Rosaceae and Fagaceae. Our results indicate that the genus Chrysoperla was mostly correlated with
the Plantaginaceae, Brassicaceae and Asteraceae plant families in the cover vegetation, and with
the Caryophyllaceae and Rosaceae families in the patch vegetation. The genera Apertochrysa and
Pseudomallada were associated with the families Malvaceae and Poaceae in the cover vegetation,
and with the families Cupressaceae, Poaceae and Pinaceae in the patch vegetation. Our study
shows to the farmers the possibilities of vegetation cover management to select plant families for the
cover vegetation.