The impact of family farming on Afrotropical flower fly communities (Diptera, Syrphidae): A case study in Tanzania.

To provide empirical evidence about the impact of family farming on Afrotropical flower fly communities (Diptera, Syrphidae), we established a large experimental setup in the Morogoro area (Eastern Central Tanzania) and quantified insect abundance and diversity in contrasting agricultural landscapes...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sija Kabota, Jacqueline Bakengesa, Jenipher Tairo, Abdul Kudra, Ramadhani Majubwa, Marc De Meyer, Maulid Mwatawala, Kurt Jordaens, Massimiliano Virgilio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0327126
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849319482764296192
author Sija Kabota
Jacqueline Bakengesa
Jenipher Tairo
Abdul Kudra
Ramadhani Majubwa
Marc De Meyer
Maulid Mwatawala
Kurt Jordaens
Massimiliano Virgilio
author_facet Sija Kabota
Jacqueline Bakengesa
Jenipher Tairo
Abdul Kudra
Ramadhani Majubwa
Marc De Meyer
Maulid Mwatawala
Kurt Jordaens
Massimiliano Virgilio
author_sort Sija Kabota
collection DOAJ
description To provide empirical evidence about the impact of family farming on Afrotropical flower fly communities (Diptera, Syrphidae), we established a large experimental setup in the Morogoro area (Eastern Central Tanzania) and quantified insect abundance and diversity in contrasting agricultural landscapes. Over the two years of this study, we collected 12,969 flower flies from 55 species and 3 subfamilies: Eristalinae (29 species), Microdontinae (2 species), and Syrphinae (24 species). The ten most abundant species contributed to 84.95% of specimens. Overall, we did not observe major changes in species richness or diversity between agroecological and conventional farming. In contrast, higher abundances of the two dominant species, Toxomerus floralis (Fabricius, 1798) and Paragus borbonicus Macquart, 1842 (69.49% of all specimens collected) were observed in agroecological treatments. This effect was more pronounced where the landscape features were more favourable to each of these species (i.e., in the plateau for T. floralis and in the mountains for P. borbonicus). Landscape provided a comparably much stronger effect than farming practices, and the percentage of variation explained by landscape, as a standalone factor, was approximately five times higher than for farming practices. Spatial heterogeneity and seasonality also provided a large and significant proportion of random variability. Our results stress how verifying a generally accepted paradigm of sustainable agriculture, "agroecology promotes abundance and diversity of beneficial insects", might require careful consideration, as, under field conditions, the impact of sustainable farming practices on insect communities might be embedded within complex, multi-layered ecological interactions.
format Article
id doaj-art-382c98c8f38b400f8fad824929a15f99
institution Kabale University
issn 1932-6203
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj-art-382c98c8f38b400f8fad824929a15f992025-08-20T03:50:26ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01207e032712610.1371/journal.pone.0327126The impact of family farming on Afrotropical flower fly communities (Diptera, Syrphidae): A case study in Tanzania.Sija KabotaJacqueline BakengesaJenipher TairoAbdul KudraRamadhani MajubwaMarc De MeyerMaulid MwatawalaKurt JordaensMassimiliano VirgilioTo provide empirical evidence about the impact of family farming on Afrotropical flower fly communities (Diptera, Syrphidae), we established a large experimental setup in the Morogoro area (Eastern Central Tanzania) and quantified insect abundance and diversity in contrasting agricultural landscapes. Over the two years of this study, we collected 12,969 flower flies from 55 species and 3 subfamilies: Eristalinae (29 species), Microdontinae (2 species), and Syrphinae (24 species). The ten most abundant species contributed to 84.95% of specimens. Overall, we did not observe major changes in species richness or diversity between agroecological and conventional farming. In contrast, higher abundances of the two dominant species, Toxomerus floralis (Fabricius, 1798) and Paragus borbonicus Macquart, 1842 (69.49% of all specimens collected) were observed in agroecological treatments. This effect was more pronounced where the landscape features were more favourable to each of these species (i.e., in the plateau for T. floralis and in the mountains for P. borbonicus). Landscape provided a comparably much stronger effect than farming practices, and the percentage of variation explained by landscape, as a standalone factor, was approximately five times higher than for farming practices. Spatial heterogeneity and seasonality also provided a large and significant proportion of random variability. Our results stress how verifying a generally accepted paradigm of sustainable agriculture, "agroecology promotes abundance and diversity of beneficial insects", might require careful consideration, as, under field conditions, the impact of sustainable farming practices on insect communities might be embedded within complex, multi-layered ecological interactions.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0327126
spellingShingle Sija Kabota
Jacqueline Bakengesa
Jenipher Tairo
Abdul Kudra
Ramadhani Majubwa
Marc De Meyer
Maulid Mwatawala
Kurt Jordaens
Massimiliano Virgilio
The impact of family farming on Afrotropical flower fly communities (Diptera, Syrphidae): A case study in Tanzania.
PLoS ONE
title The impact of family farming on Afrotropical flower fly communities (Diptera, Syrphidae): A case study in Tanzania.
title_full The impact of family farming on Afrotropical flower fly communities (Diptera, Syrphidae): A case study in Tanzania.
title_fullStr The impact of family farming on Afrotropical flower fly communities (Diptera, Syrphidae): A case study in Tanzania.
title_full_unstemmed The impact of family farming on Afrotropical flower fly communities (Diptera, Syrphidae): A case study in Tanzania.
title_short The impact of family farming on Afrotropical flower fly communities (Diptera, Syrphidae): A case study in Tanzania.
title_sort impact of family farming on afrotropical flower fly communities diptera syrphidae a case study in tanzania
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0327126
work_keys_str_mv AT sijakabota theimpactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT jacquelinebakengesa theimpactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT jeniphertairo theimpactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT abdulkudra theimpactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT ramadhanimajubwa theimpactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT marcdemeyer theimpactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT maulidmwatawala theimpactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT kurtjordaens theimpactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT massimilianovirgilio theimpactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT sijakabota impactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT jacquelinebakengesa impactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT jeniphertairo impactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT abdulkudra impactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT ramadhanimajubwa impactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT marcdemeyer impactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT maulidmwatawala impactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT kurtjordaens impactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania
AT massimilianovirgilio impactoffamilyfarmingonafrotropicalflowerflycommunitiesdipterasyrphidaeacasestudyintanzania