Ant community composition and functional traits in newly established
grasslands within agricultural landscapes
Abstract
1. Ongoing intensification and fragmentation of European agricultural
landscapes dramatically reduce biodiversity and associated functions. To
sustain ecosystem services such as ant mediated pest control, the
enhancement of perennial non-crop areas holds great potential. 2. To
study the potential of newly established grasslands to enhance ant
diversity and associated functions, we used hand collection data to
investigate differences in ant community composition (a) between cereal
crops, old grasslands, and new grassland transects of three years age;
(b) depending on ant functional traits; and linked to (c) natural pest
control services quantified through predation experiments. 3. Ant
species richness did not significantly differ between new and old
grasslands, but was significantly higher in grasslands compared to
cereal crops. Contrary, ant community composition of new grasslands was
more similar to cereal crops and distinct from the species-pool of old
grasslands. The functional trait space covered by the ant communities
overlapped between old and new grasslands but was extended in the old
grasslands. Pest control did not differ significantly between habitat
types, and therefore could not be linked to the prevalence of functional
traits related to biocontrol services in new grasslands. 4. Our findings
show trends of convergence between old and new grasslands, but also
indicate that enhancing ant diversity through newly established
grasslands takes longer than three years to provide comparable
biodiversity and functions. 5. Synthesis and applications Newly
established grasslands can increase ant species richness, abundance, and
pest control in agroecosystems. However, three years after
establishment, new grasslands were still dominated by common agrobiont
ant species and lacked habitat specialists present in old grasslands,
who require a constant supply of food resources and long colonization
times. New grasslands represent a promising measure for enhancing
agricultural landscapes but must be preserved in the longer term to
sustain biodiversity and associated ecosystem services.