Mixing-in native thorny shrubs greatly improves the habitat quality of short rotation coppice strips within a modern agroforestry system for breeding birds

Silvoarable agroforestry systems (AFS) with short rotation coppice strips (CS) are novel land-use systems that combine fast-growing trees with croplands to simultaneously produce woody biomass and arable crops. Since their effects on biodiversity remain underexplored, we studied nesting site selecti...

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Main Authors: Jana Linnebank, Felix Zitzmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-04-01
Series:Global Ecology and Conservation
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989425001076
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author Jana Linnebank
Felix Zitzmann
author_facet Jana Linnebank
Felix Zitzmann
author_sort Jana Linnebank
collection DOAJ
description Silvoarable agroforestry systems (AFS) with short rotation coppice strips (CS) are novel land-use systems that combine fast-growing trees with croplands to simultaneously produce woody biomass and arable crops. Since their effects on biodiversity remain underexplored, we studied nesting site selection and breeding success of tree- and shrub-breeding birds in three different CS variants, located on an AFS experimental site in northern Germany: CS-C (poplar clones only), CS-A (aspen trees and poplar clones) and CS-E (native woody species and poplar clones). Thereby, the study focused on the question of whether CS can be enhanced for breeding birds by integrating native woody plants that typically grow in hedgerows (variant CS-E). CS-E significantly outperformed CS-C and CS-A, hosting two-thirds of all nests, 70 % of breeding attempts, and two-thirds of successful broods, despite comprising only one-third of the CS area. Native woody plants, covering only about 10 % of the total CS area, accounted for nearly 70 % of all nests and two-thirds of breeding attempts and successful broods. By contrast, poplars (aspen and poplar clones as the actual crop), occupying nearly 90 % of the CS area, accounted for only 30 % of all nests and breeding attempts, respectively, and 22 % of successful broods. Number of nests per 1000 trees was 13 times higher in native woody plants (26.0) than in poplars (2.0) and thorny shrubs of the Rosaceae family such as Rosa or Crataegus species and Pyrus pyraster were particularly preferred for nesting. To improve the habitat quality for breeding birds, we therefore recommend the integration of native woody plants, especially thorny Rosaceae species, into CS in modern AFS.
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spelling doaj-art-4884754ff4134714b7c86a068f43cd872025-08-20T03:15:16ZengElsevierGlobal Ecology and Conservation2351-98942025-04-0158e0350610.1016/j.gecco.2025.e03506Mixing-in native thorny shrubs greatly improves the habitat quality of short rotation coppice strips within a modern agroforestry system for breeding birdsJana Linnebank0Felix Zitzmann1Institute of Environmental Planning, Leibniz University Hannover, Hannover, GermanyCorresponding author.; Institute of Environmental Planning, Leibniz University Hannover, Hannover, GermanySilvoarable agroforestry systems (AFS) with short rotation coppice strips (CS) are novel land-use systems that combine fast-growing trees with croplands to simultaneously produce woody biomass and arable crops. Since their effects on biodiversity remain underexplored, we studied nesting site selection and breeding success of tree- and shrub-breeding birds in three different CS variants, located on an AFS experimental site in northern Germany: CS-C (poplar clones only), CS-A (aspen trees and poplar clones) and CS-E (native woody species and poplar clones). Thereby, the study focused on the question of whether CS can be enhanced for breeding birds by integrating native woody plants that typically grow in hedgerows (variant CS-E). CS-E significantly outperformed CS-C and CS-A, hosting two-thirds of all nests, 70 % of breeding attempts, and two-thirds of successful broods, despite comprising only one-third of the CS area. Native woody plants, covering only about 10 % of the total CS area, accounted for nearly 70 % of all nests and two-thirds of breeding attempts and successful broods. By contrast, poplars (aspen and poplar clones as the actual crop), occupying nearly 90 % of the CS area, accounted for only 30 % of all nests and breeding attempts, respectively, and 22 % of successful broods. Number of nests per 1000 trees was 13 times higher in native woody plants (26.0) than in poplars (2.0) and thorny shrubs of the Rosaceae family such as Rosa or Crataegus species and Pyrus pyraster were particularly preferred for nesting. To improve the habitat quality for breeding birds, we therefore recommend the integration of native woody plants, especially thorny Rosaceae species, into CS in modern AFS.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989425001076BiodiversityAvifaunaPopulusAlley croppingBioenergy
spellingShingle Jana Linnebank
Felix Zitzmann
Mixing-in native thorny shrubs greatly improves the habitat quality of short rotation coppice strips within a modern agroforestry system for breeding birds
Global Ecology and Conservation
Biodiversity
Avifauna
Populus
Alley cropping
Bioenergy
title Mixing-in native thorny shrubs greatly improves the habitat quality of short rotation coppice strips within a modern agroforestry system for breeding birds
title_full Mixing-in native thorny shrubs greatly improves the habitat quality of short rotation coppice strips within a modern agroforestry system for breeding birds
title_fullStr Mixing-in native thorny shrubs greatly improves the habitat quality of short rotation coppice strips within a modern agroforestry system for breeding birds
title_full_unstemmed Mixing-in native thorny shrubs greatly improves the habitat quality of short rotation coppice strips within a modern agroforestry system for breeding birds
title_short Mixing-in native thorny shrubs greatly improves the habitat quality of short rotation coppice strips within a modern agroforestry system for breeding birds
title_sort mixing in native thorny shrubs greatly improves the habitat quality of short rotation coppice strips within a modern agroforestry system for breeding birds
topic Biodiversity
Avifauna
Populus
Alley cropping
Bioenergy
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989425001076
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