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DOI | 10.1016/j.agee.2018.11.013 |
Unintentional effects of environmentally-friendly farming practices: Arising conflicts between zero-tillage and a crop pest, the common vole (Microtus arvalis) | |
Roos, Deon1,2; Caminero Saldana, Constantino2; Arroyo, Beatriz3; Mougeot, Francois3; Jose Luque-Larena, Juan4,5; Lambin, Xavier1 | |
发表日期 | 2019 |
ISSN | 0167-8809 |
EISSN | 1873-2305 |
卷号 | 272页码:105-113 |
英文摘要 | Common voles are a main European facultative, fossorial, farmland rodent pest that can greatly reduce crop yields during population outbreaks. Crop protection against common voles is a complex task that requires the consideration of a set of preventive and control measures within an integrated pest management strategy. A possible option could be to modify farming practices to reduce the availability of refuges for rodents and the damage to crops that they subsequently cause. Farming, however, must simultaneously meet multiple goals including the reduction of the carbon (C) emissions, soil erosion and water use, and the improvement of soil quality. Crop establishment through conservation agriculture strategies, like zero-tillage, would reduce crop management investment, but is also promoted in many regions to reduce C emissions and increase soil organic matter. It could, however, create favourable refuge habitats for fossorial rodent crop pests, like common voles, benefitting from reduced soil disturbance between crop rotations and thus increasing burrow persistence. Assessing the impact that tillage practices, their interaction with different crops and the influence of proximity to potential common vole sources, have on common vole occupancy could provide a valuable tool within an integrated management strategy. Using a 2-ha experimental field with 62 plots 180 m(2) (each roughly matching common vole home range size) located experimental plots in north-western Spain, we tested how tillage practices, crop type (wheat, barley, vetch, Narbonne vetch, pea and fallow) and distances from possible colonization sources affect field use by common vole during low population density conditions. Our results show that tillage practices have more influence on common vole occurrence (zero tillage > reduced and conventional tillage) than other aspects such as crop type thus supporting the hypothesis that tillage practices play a key role in common vole habitat use. |
WOS研究方向 | Agriculture ; Environmental Sciences & Ecology |
来源期刊 | AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT
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文献类型 | 期刊论文 |
条目标识符 | http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/93490 |
作者单位 | 1.Univ Aberdeen, Sch Biol Sci, Tillydrone Ave, Aberdeen AB24 2TZ, Scotland; 2.Inst Tecnol Agr Castilla & Leon ITACyL, Area Plagas, Ctra Burgos Km 119, Valladolid 47071, Spain; 3.UCLM, Inst Invest Recursos Cineget, CSIC, IREC,JCCM, Ronda Toledo S-N, Ciudad Real 13071, Spain; 4.Univ Valladolid, Dept Ciencias Agroforestales, ETSIIAA, Avda Madrid 44, Palencia 34004, Spain; 5.Inst Univ Invest Gest Forestal Sostenible, Palencia, Spain |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | Roos, Deon,Caminero Saldana, Constantino,Arroyo, Beatriz,et al. Unintentional effects of environmentally-friendly farming practices: Arising conflicts between zero-tillage and a crop pest, the common vole (Microtus arvalis)[J],2019,272:105-113. |
APA | Roos, Deon,Caminero Saldana, Constantino,Arroyo, Beatriz,Mougeot, Francois,Jose Luque-Larena, Juan,&Lambin, Xavier.(2019).Unintentional effects of environmentally-friendly farming practices: Arising conflicts between zero-tillage and a crop pest, the common vole (Microtus arvalis).AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT,272,105-113. |
MLA | Roos, Deon,et al."Unintentional effects of environmentally-friendly farming practices: Arising conflicts between zero-tillage and a crop pest, the common vole (Microtus arvalis)".AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT 272(2019):105-113. |
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