The impact of animals on crop yields in Malawian rural villages
The impact of animals on crop yields in Malawian rural villages
It is essential that the net effect of biodiversity on crop yields is determined; particularly in developing nations, where both increasing food security and reducing biodiversity losses are of high importance. This study modelled the abundance of pests, pollinators and pest-control animals and determined their impact on crop yield within agroecosystems in four rural villages in Malawi. Data on the habitat area, survivorship, fecundity, birthing month and effect on crop yield for 14 animal functional groups were collated through a focused meta-analysis. Using this data, models were created to determine the abundance of each functional group using land cover as the sole input variable; with Participatory Rural Appraisals (PRA) utilised to validate the model prediction. Bees, birds and insects always improved crop yield, whereas monkeys, rodents and large herbivores always result in losses. Three out of four villages experienced a net benefit to crop yield from the animal biodiversity present. We conclude that models derived from meta-analyses appear useful for broadly predicting the local-scale abundance of functional groups and their qualitative impact on crop yield. However, long-term field observations should be conducted to ensure that the PRA values in this study correlate with direct observation.
3016-3028
Weyell, Jessica
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Eigenbrod, Felix
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Hudson, Malcolm D.
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Kafumbata, Dalitso
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Tsirizeni, Mathews
9183e9f5-d430-4775-aed0-620658c13ff9
Chiotha, Sosten
258aabc8-59bc-409e-913f-039647b3edf5
Poppy, Guy M.
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Willcock, Simon
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Weyell, Jessica
4f31658c-2f31-40b6-9b78-be7ac52ed347
Eigenbrod, Felix
43efc6ae-b129-45a2-8a34-e489b5f05827
Hudson, Malcolm D.
1ae18506-6f2a-48af-8c72-83ab28679f55
Kafumbata, Dalitso
3468d2ca-a590-4d61-8b37-e1630419f192
Tsirizeni, Mathews
9183e9f5-d430-4775-aed0-620658c13ff9
Chiotha, Sosten
258aabc8-59bc-409e-913f-039647b3edf5
Poppy, Guy M.
e18524cf-10ae-4ab4-b50c-e73e7d841389
Willcock, Simon
89d9767e-8076-4b21-be9d-a964f5cc85d7
Weyell, Jessica, Eigenbrod, Felix, Hudson, Malcolm D., Kafumbata, Dalitso, Tsirizeni, Mathews, Chiotha, Sosten, Poppy, Guy M. and Willcock, Simon
(2015)
The impact of animals on crop yields in Malawian rural villages.
African Journal of Agricultural Research, 10 (31), .
(doi:10.5897/AJAR2015.9966).
(In Press)
Abstract
It is essential that the net effect of biodiversity on crop yields is determined; particularly in developing nations, where both increasing food security and reducing biodiversity losses are of high importance. This study modelled the abundance of pests, pollinators and pest-control animals and determined their impact on crop yield within agroecosystems in four rural villages in Malawi. Data on the habitat area, survivorship, fecundity, birthing month and effect on crop yield for 14 animal functional groups were collated through a focused meta-analysis. Using this data, models were created to determine the abundance of each functional group using land cover as the sole input variable; with Participatory Rural Appraisals (PRA) utilised to validate the model prediction. Bees, birds and insects always improved crop yield, whereas monkeys, rodents and large herbivores always result in losses. Three out of four villages experienced a net benefit to crop yield from the animal biodiversity present. We conclude that models derived from meta-analyses appear useful for broadly predicting the local-scale abundance of functional groups and their qualitative impact on crop yield. However, long-term field observations should be conducted to ensure that the PRA values in this study correlate with direct observation.
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Accepted/In Press date: 21 July 2015
Organisations:
Centre for Environmental Science, Environmental, Centre for Biological Sciences
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Local EPrints ID: 380056
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/380056
PURE UUID: 3c874d84-3ab3-4ac7-ab51-52bbeee37a8d
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Date deposited: 02 Sep 2015 15:09
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:36
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Author:
Jessica Weyell
Author:
Dalitso Kafumbata
Author:
Mathews Tsirizeni
Author:
Sosten Chiotha
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