Contrasting effects of bioenergy crops on biodiversity

Citation

N.L. Haan et al. "Contrasting effects of bioenergy crops on biodiversity" Science Advances 9:eadh7960 (2023) [DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adh7960]

Description

Agriculture is driving biodiversity loss, and future bioenergy cropping systems have the potential to ameliorate or exacerbate these effects. Using a long-term experimental array of 10 bioenergy cropping systems, we quantified diversity of plants, invertebrates, vertebrates, and microbes in each crop. For many taxonomic groups, alternative annual cropping systems provided no biodiversity benefits when compared to corn (the business-as-usual bioenergy crop in the United States), and simple perennial grass–based systems provided only modest gains. In contrast, for most animal groups, richness in plant-diverse perennial systems was much higher than in annual crops or simple perennial systems. Microbial richness patterns were more eclectic, although some groups responded positively to plant diversity. Future agricultural landscapes incorporating plant-diverse perennial bioenergy cropping systems could be of high conservation value. However, increased use of annual crops will continue to have negative effects, and simple perennial grass systems may provide little improvement over annual crops. Ten bioenergy crops that could dominate future landscapes support vastly different amounts of biodiversity

Data Access

Raw sequence reads for all samples are available in the Sequence Read Archive and accessible through the BioProject number PRJNA847575. All data needed to evaluate the conclusions in the paper are present in the paper and/or the Supplementary Materials or can be found on Zenodo (doi: 10.5281/zenodo.8215581).

Sustainability
Field data