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Intensive agriculture with high reliance on pesticides and fertilizers constitutes a major strategy for 'feeding the world'. However, such conventional intensification is linked to diminishing returns and can result in 'intensification traps'-production declines triggered by the negative feedback of biodiversity loss at high input levels. Here we developed a novel framework that accounts for biodiversity feedback on crop yields to evaluate the risk and magnitude of intensification traps. Simulations grounded in systematic literature reviews showed that intensification traps emerge in most landscape types, but to a lesser extent in major cereal production systems. Furthermore, small reductions in maximal production (5-10%) could be frequently transmitted into substantial biodiversity gains, resulting in small-loss large-gain trade-offs prevailing across landscape types. However, sensitivity analyses revealed a strong context dependence of trap emergence, inducing substantial uncertainty in the identification of optimal management at the field scale. Hence, we recommend the development of case-specific safety margins for intensification preventing double losses in biodiversity and food security associated with intensification traps.
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Alfred Burian
Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research
Claire Kremen
University of Bern
James Shyan-Tau Wu
University of British Columbia
Nature Ecology & Evolution
University of British Columbia
Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
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Burian et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e75683b6db6435876ce3ae — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-024-02349-0