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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

Authors :
Eleanor Warren‐Thomas
Fahmuddin Agus
Panji Gusti Akbar
Merry Crowson
Keith C. Hamer
Bambang Hariyadi
Jenny A. Hodgson
Winda D. Kartika
Mailys Lopes
Jennifer M. Lucey
Dedy Mustaqim
Nathalie Pettorelli
Asmadi Saad
Widia Sari
Gita Sukma
Lindsay C. Stringer
Caroline Ward
Jane K. Hill
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

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

Subjects

Subjects :
Ecology

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00218901
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....73c146625d7f1ce3e8d4df28e9372a9b