In ecosystems managed for food or fiber production,there is often no space for biodiversity.For example,intensive cereal monocultures are usually managed towards optimized yields using herbicides,fungicides and insect...In ecosystems managed for food or fiber production,there is often no space for biodiversity.For example,intensive cereal monocultures are usually managed towards optimized yields using herbicides,fungicides and insecticides.In such systems,biodiversity is essentially unwanted,except maybe when it improves soil health or carbon fixation.Consequently,it has been difficult to convincingly show if and where biodiversity is economically important in intensive production systems.展开更多
基金The Jena Experiment has been funded by the DFG(FOR 1451/2,FOR 1451/3)CS has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under agreement No.727284from Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under grant agreement No.101081964.
文摘In ecosystems managed for food or fiber production,there is often no space for biodiversity.For example,intensive cereal monocultures are usually managed towards optimized yields using herbicides,fungicides and insecticides.In such systems,biodiversity is essentially unwanted,except maybe when it improves soil health or carbon fixation.Consequently,it has been difficult to convincingly show if and where biodiversity is economically important in intensive production systems.