Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2414812 | Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment | 2011 | 8 Pages |
We studied the impact of seed mixtures (grass-clover, less competitive grass vs. meadow plant mixture) and mowing (annual mowing vs. no mowing) on the abundance of seed and insect food for farmland birds in set-aside in a long-term field experiment. In general, seed food was less affected by the treatments than insect food. The impact of seed mixture on the abundance of seed food was dependent on the study year: the highest level recorded in the first year, followed by a substantial decline in the following years. Mowing increased the biomass of seed food. The impact of treatments on insect food abundance differed between the total amount of insect food, and had significant interactions with year. Different insect groups dominated in each year as well as their response to the treatments. For the total amount, the meadow plant seed mixture appeared to be the most beneficial and a slight positive impact of mowing appeared in the last two years of the experiment. The results suggest that the value of set-asides in providing food differs according to food components and declines with increasing age of the set-aside.
► Food provision of set-asides for farmland birds can be manipulated by management. ► We studied the impact of seed mixtures and mowing practices for seed and insect food. ► Seed food was less affected by the treatments than insect food. ► The value of set-asides for farmland birds differed according to food components. ► The value in providing food declined with increasing age of the set-aside.