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The influence of landscape composition and configuration on crop yield resilience
1. Sustainable agriculture aims to produce sufficient food while minimizing environmental damage. To achieve this, we need to understand the role of agricultural landscapes in providing diverse ecosystem services and how these affect crop production and resilience, that is, maintaining yields despite environmental perturbation.
We used 10 years of English wheat yield data to derive three metrics of resilience (relative yield across the time series, yield stability around a moving average and resistance to an extreme weather event) at 10 km Ă 10 km resolution. We used remotely sensed maps to calculate measures of landscape structure, including composition (proportions of different land cover types) and configuration (metrics of connectivity and proximity), known to affect ecosystem service delivery (e.g. control of pests by beneficial invertebrates). We then used an informationâtheoretic approach to identify the bestâfitting combination of landscape structure predictors for each resilience metric, using a potential yield model to account for the effects of climate and soils.
Relative yield showed a strongly positive relationship with the area of arable land. For yield stability, this relationship was evident but alongside other landscape structure variables in the bestâfitting model. No relationship with arable land was evident for resistance.
Yield stability showed a strongly positive effect of proximity to semiânatural habitats. For resistance, the bestâfitting model included positive relationships with the cover of semiânatural habitats and proximity to semiânatural grasslands.
Synthesis and applications. Landscapes with the highest relative wheat yields did not show the highest yield stability or resistance to extreme events. As resilience metrics were derived from shorter portions of the time series, the importance of semiânatural habitats compared to arable land increased. This is probably driven by the complex interplay between landscape structure, agricultural management and ecosystem services. These results demonstrate that measuring relative yield over time may be insufficient to capture the full effect that nonâarable components of the landscape, and the ecosystem services they deliver, have on other aspects of resilience, and that there are clear tradeâoffs in managing agricultural landscapes to maximize different aspects of crop yield resilience
Love in '76 : an incident of the revolution. A comedietta, in two acts / by Oliver Bunce ; as performed at Laura Keene's theatre, New York, Feb. 28, 1857. To which are added, a description of the costume--cast of the characters ... and the whole of the stage business.
22 p. 19 cm.rare copy: Imprint on cover: New York, S. French & son; London, S. French
The romance of the revolution: being a history of the personal adventures, heroic exploits, and romantic incidents ... in the war of independence.
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