Abstract
Background
Designing agroecological cropping systems enhancing functional biodiversity and natural pest regulations requires understanding the ecological processes involved, specifically regarding the response of generalist predators. A more precise knowledge of the changes in ground-dwelling communities implied by individual agronomic interventions is needed to make enlightened and consistent choices in the design of such innovative cropping systems. A recent systematic map showed that fertilization, tillage, pesticides use, grazing and mowing are the most studied agronomic interventions regarding their effects on arthropods. The direct and indirect effects of disturbances induced by agronomic interventions on ground-dwelling arthropods in arable fields have been widely investigated, especially for carabids and spiders. However, there is not always a clear pattern outstanding, probably due to antagonistic responses of species with different functional traits. Here, we propose a quantified synthesis on this topic. We will show the impact of the main agronomic interventions in arable fields on the two most studied ground-dwelling predator groups, carabids and spiders, and compare their response (abundance, species richness, taxonomic and functional diversity) in different contexts (crop types and production methods). We will investigate contrasting responses at different taxonomic levels depending on functional traits.
Methods
The evidence will be identified from the recent systematic map on the impacts of agricultural management practices on biodiversity indicator species groups published in 2024. We will select all studies reporting the effect of the most studied agronomic interventions (fertilization, tillage, pesticide application, mowing and grazing) in arable fields (arable crops and temporary grasslands) on carabids and spiders in the map database. A search update will be performed using the search strings used for the systematic map for carabids and spiders, and extracted references will be sorted at title, abstract and full text levels according to the topic of the present work. All selected studies will be critically appraised and a low, medium, or high risk of bias will be assigned to each study. The synthesis of the data extracted from the studies will be first narrative (using qualitative data), and then quantitative for those with adequate data for a meta-analysis.