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No evidence for trade-offs between bird diversity, yield and water table depth on oil palm smallholdings: Implications for tropical peatland landscape restoration. / Warren-Thomas, Eleanor; Agus, Fahmuddin; Akbar, Panji Gusti et al.
Yn: Journal of Applied Ecology, Cyfrol 59, Rhif 5, 01.05.2022, t. 1231-1247.

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HarvardHarvard

Warren-Thomas, E, Agus, F, Akbar, PG, Crowson, M, Hamer, KC, Hariyadi, B, Hodgson, JA, Kartika, WD, Lopes, M, Lucey, JM, Mustaqim, D, Pettorelli, N, Saad, A, Sari, W, Sukma, G, Stringer, LC, Ward, C & Hill, JK 2022, 'No evidence for trade-offs between bird diversity, yield and water table depth on oil palm smallholdings: Implications for tropical peatland landscape restoration', Journal of Applied Ecology, cyfrol. 59, rhif 5, tt. 1231-1247. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.14135

APA

Warren-Thomas, E., Agus, F., Akbar, P. G., Crowson, M., Hamer, K. C., Hariyadi, B., Hodgson, J. A., Kartika, W. D., Lopes, M., Lucey, J. M., Mustaqim, D., Pettorelli, N., Saad, A., Sari, W., Sukma, G., Stringer, L. C., Ward, C., & Hill, J. K. (2022). No evidence for trade-offs between bird diversity, yield and water table depth on oil palm smallholdings: Implications for tropical peatland landscape restoration. Journal of Applied Ecology, 59(5), 1231-1247. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.14135

CBE

Warren-Thomas E, Agus F, Akbar PG, Crowson M, Hamer KC, Hariyadi B, Hodgson JA, Kartika WD, Lopes M, Lucey JM, et al. 2022. No evidence for trade-offs between bird diversity, yield and water table depth on oil palm smallholdings: Implications for tropical peatland landscape restoration. Journal of Applied Ecology. 59(5):1231-1247. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.14135

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Warren-Thomas E, Agus F, Akbar PG, Crowson M, Hamer KC, Hariyadi B et al. No evidence for trade-offs between bird diversity, yield and water table depth on oil palm smallholdings: Implications for tropical peatland landscape restoration. Journal of Applied Ecology. 2022 Mai 1;59(5):1231-1247. Epub 2022 Maw 14. doi: 10.1111/1365-2664.14135

Author

Warren-Thomas, Eleanor ; Agus, Fahmuddin ; Akbar, Panji Gusti et al. / No evidence for trade-offs between bird diversity, yield and water table depth on oil palm smallholdings: Implications for tropical peatland landscape restoration. Yn: Journal of Applied Ecology. 2022 ; Cyfrol 59, Rhif 5. tt. 1231-1247.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - No evidence for trade-offs between bird diversity, yield and water table depth on oil palm smallholdings: Implications for tropical peatland landscape restoration

AU - Warren-Thomas, Eleanor

AU - Agus, Fahmuddin

AU - Akbar, Panji Gusti

AU - Crowson, Merry

AU - Hamer, Keith C.

AU - Hariyadi, Bambang

AU - Hodgson, Jenny A.

AU - Kartika, Winda D.

AU - Lopes, Mailys

AU - Lucey, Jennifer M.

AU - Mustaqim, Dedy

AU - Pettorelli, Nathalie

AU - Saad, Asmadi

AU - Sari, Widia

AU - Sukma, Gita

AU - Stringer, Lindsay C.

AU - Ward, Caroline

AU - Hill, Jane K.

PY - 2022/5/1

Y1 - 2022/5/1

N2 - Tropical peat swamp forests retain large carbon stocks and support unique biodiversity, but clearance and drainage for agriculture have resulted in fires, carbon emissions and biodiversity losses. Initiatives to re-wet cultivated peatlands may benefit biodiversity if this protects remaining forests from fire and agricultural encroachment, but there are concerns that re-wetting could reduce yields and damage livelihoods, as relationships between drainage, on-farm biodiversity, and crop yields have not been studied.We examined oil palm fruit yields and bird diversity on 41 smallholder farms in Jambi (Sumatra, Indonesia), which varied in drainage intensity (12-month mean water table per plot from August 2018 to August 2019: −52 to −3 cm below-ground). We also compared farm bird diversity with a neighbouring area of protected peat swamp forest (11,000 ha, 21 plots; mean water table per plot −3 to +15 cm).Bird species richness (3–18 species per plot), species composition and oil palm yields (4.5–19.2 t fresh fruit bunch ha−1 year−1) varied among farms, but were not detectably affected by water table depth, although ground-level vegetation was more complex on wetter farms. Bird richness in oil palm (mean = 10.3 species per plot) was <50% of that in forest (26 species per plot), and only 3 of 35 conservation-priority species found in forest were recorded in oil palm.Synthesis and applications. Tropical peatlands in Indonesia have been drained to allow farmer access and improve farm yields, but we found no trade-offs between drainage depth, yields and bird diversity on smallholder oil palm farms in our study landscape within the studied range of drainage depths. Current restoration initiatives to re-wet peat may benefit farmers by reducing fire risk, without affecting yields. Wetter farms had increased understorey vegetation complexity, but this did not affect bird diversity, so we find no evidence that re-wetting improves on-farm biodiversity. However, on-farm fire reduction efforts in cultivated peatlands, including re-wetting, will be vital for reducing the risk of fires escaping into nearby forests, which contain unique and diverse bird species assemblages. Protection of remaining peatland forests from fire and clearance is key for biodiversity conservation, and for providing a source of seed dispersers and genetic material for future forest and landscape restoration efforts. Restoration of more biodiversity-friendly land covers will improve landscape permeability and help conserve species and the ecosystem services they deliver.

AB - Tropical peat swamp forests retain large carbon stocks and support unique biodiversity, but clearance and drainage for agriculture have resulted in fires, carbon emissions and biodiversity losses. Initiatives to re-wet cultivated peatlands may benefit biodiversity if this protects remaining forests from fire and agricultural encroachment, but there are concerns that re-wetting could reduce yields and damage livelihoods, as relationships between drainage, on-farm biodiversity, and crop yields have not been studied.We examined oil palm fruit yields and bird diversity on 41 smallholder farms in Jambi (Sumatra, Indonesia), which varied in drainage intensity (12-month mean water table per plot from August 2018 to August 2019: −52 to −3 cm below-ground). We also compared farm bird diversity with a neighbouring area of protected peat swamp forest (11,000 ha, 21 plots; mean water table per plot −3 to +15 cm).Bird species richness (3–18 species per plot), species composition and oil palm yields (4.5–19.2 t fresh fruit bunch ha−1 year−1) varied among farms, but were not detectably affected by water table depth, although ground-level vegetation was more complex on wetter farms. Bird richness in oil palm (mean = 10.3 species per plot) was <50% of that in forest (26 species per plot), and only 3 of 35 conservation-priority species found in forest were recorded in oil palm.Synthesis and applications. Tropical peatlands in Indonesia have been drained to allow farmer access and improve farm yields, but we found no trade-offs between drainage depth, yields and bird diversity on smallholder oil palm farms in our study landscape within the studied range of drainage depths. Current restoration initiatives to re-wet peat may benefit farmers by reducing fire risk, without affecting yields. Wetter farms had increased understorey vegetation complexity, but this did not affect bird diversity, so we find no evidence that re-wetting improves on-farm biodiversity. However, on-farm fire reduction efforts in cultivated peatlands, including re-wetting, will be vital for reducing the risk of fires escaping into nearby forests, which contain unique and diverse bird species assemblages. Protection of remaining peatland forests from fire and clearance is key for biodiversity conservation, and for providing a source of seed dispersers and genetic material for future forest and landscape restoration efforts. Restoration of more biodiversity-friendly land covers will improve landscape permeability and help conserve species and the ecosystem services they deliver.

KW - birds

KW - canal blocking

KW - deforestation

KW - Indonesia

KW - Jambi

KW - peat swamp forest

KW - peatlands

KW - Sumatra

U2 - 10.1111/1365-2664.14135

DO - 10.1111/1365-2664.14135

M3 - Article

VL - 59

SP - 1231

EP - 1247

JO - Journal of Applied Ecology

JF - Journal of Applied Ecology

SN - 0021-8901

IS - 5

ER -