The effects of different crop management intensities were investigated on the arthropod community in a sugar beet rotation between 1989-1992 and in an oilseed rape rotation including long-term setaside between 1992 and 1995. There was a general reduction of arthropod production with increasing intensity of crop management, but very different and sometimes even opposite reactions at the species level. The intensity of effects depended on the type of lifecycle (e.g. rove beetles are sensitive to pesticide applications only during their reproduction period and not during the hatching of their new generation). Certain pest insect species were enhanced by an increasing intensity of crop management. Due to harvest and tillage procedures some beneficials were not able to build up stable populations in arable crops but did so in long term set-aside areas. The activity period of certain beneficials is shorter the more intensive crop production is conducted. Body length was inversely related to management intensity. Number of individuals, species richness and reproductive rate increased with progressive extensification and especially in set-aside areas with natural succession. The percentage of pioneer species of spiders decreased with increasing extensification and extension of the crop rotation, and lycosid spiders dominated in the set-aside area with natural succession. The percentage of euryoecious (spider) species increased with more intensive cultivation. The greatest similarity in species composition was between the set-aside area and the more extensively managed crops.
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