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Dramatic losses of specialist arable plants in Central Germany since the 1950s/60s – a cross‐regional analysis

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TLDR
In this article, the consequences of agricultural intensification since the 1950s for Central Europe's plant communities of arable plants were assessed using a semipermanent plot design to analyse changes in 392 field interiors for 10 study regions, including sandy, limestone and loamy sites.
Abstract
Aim To assess the consequences of agricultural intensification since the 1950s for Central Europe’s plant communities of arable plants. Location Central Germany. Methods We employed a semipermanent plot design to analyse changes in 392 field interiors for 10 study regions, including sandy, limestone and loamy sites between the 1950s/60s and 2009. Results The analysis revealed a reduction in the regional species pool during the 50-year period of 23% (from 301 to 233 vascular species) and dramatic losses in plot-level diversity (from medians of 24 to 7). Median cover of spontaneously growing arable plants decreased from 30% to 3%. Losses were disproportionally larger on limestone sites while sandy sites maintained a larger fraction of the original diversity. Archaeophytes, neophytes and most Poaceae (including some aggressive weeds) showed similarly strong losses as indigenous plants. This contradicts the assumption that grasses and neophytes are generally profiting from agricultural intensification. Crop diversity decreased from 25 crop plants present in the 1950s/60s to only 16 in 2009, while crop cover generally increased. Winter cereals, oilseed rape and maize are dominant today, while all other crop types showed strong declines. Main conclusions Vegetation change over time depended on soil substrate with once markedly different arable communities now showing more homogenized community structure. Increasing Ellenberg indicator values for nitrogen and pH point to N fertilization as a major driver of change. New conservation measures such as the establishment of field flora reserves and agri-environment schemes with less intensive land use are thus urgently needed especially on limestone substrates to bring an end to the decline of this functionally distinct and increasingly threatened component of the Central European flora.

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Weeds for bees? A review

TL;DR: A conceptual framework allowing to define ecological engineering options based upon ecosystem services of weeds and pollinators is presented and it is shown that weed abundance can reduce crop yields, thus inducing conflict with farmers, but weed abundance enhances regulating services by ensuring the survival of honeybees in the absence of oil seed crops.
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Cultivar mixtures: a meta-analysis of the effect of intraspecific diversity on crop yield

TL;DR: It is suggested that cultivar mixtures are a viable strategy to increase diversity in agroecosystems, promoting increased yield and yield stability, with minimal environmental impact.
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What good is weed diversity

TL;DR: It is argued that, regardless of how weeds are perceived, there are common ecological principles that should underpin any approach to managing weed communities, and, based on these principles, increasing in‐field weed diversity could be advantageous agronomically as well as environmentally.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vegetation resurvey is robust to plot location uncertainty

TL;DR: The resurvey of historical vegetation plots is robust to uncertainty in original plot location and provides reliable evidence of decadal changes in plant communities, providing important background for other resurvey studies and opens up the possibility for large-scale assessments of plant community change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Management options for the conservation of rare arable plants in Europe

TL;DR: In this article, a review of various strategies to counter these trends, and to conserve traditional arable plant communities, various strategies have been developed, ranging from an integration of conservation aspects into existing farming systems with a focus on crop production (i.e., land sharing strategies) to land sparing measures where conservation aspects take priority over crop production.
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R: A language and environment for statistical computing.

R Core Team
- 01 Jan 2014 - 
TL;DR: Copyright (©) 1999–2012 R Foundation for Statistical Computing; permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and permission notice are preserved on all copies.
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Very high resolution interpolated climate surfaces for global land areas.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed interpolated climate surfaces for global land areas (excluding Antarctica) at a spatial resolution of 30 arc s (often referred to as 1-km spatial resolution).

CANOCO Reference Manual and CanoDraw for Windows User's Guide: Software for Canonical Community Ordination (version 4.5)

TL;DR: Canoco as discussed by the authors is a software package for multivariate data analysis, with an emphasis on dimesional reduction (ordination), regression analysis, and the combination of the two, constrained ordination.
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