Agricultural drainage ditches: Aquatic and terrestrial interactions in the landscape
Aquatic macroinvertebrates in ditches and their influence on phosphorus. Since 2008, our lab has been studying the aquatic macroinvertebrate communities of agricultural drainage ditches on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. Drainage ditches are an important component of agricultural infrastructure, and help to increase crop yields by controlling soil moisture levels. Ditches also provide habitat to many different species, as they are un-cropped areas that may contain many different plant species, and provide habitats to aquatic species for at least part of the year. The main research questions of interest in our lab in terms of aquatic taxa are: 1) what are the communities of aquatic macroinvertebrates present in drainage ditches, and 2) what are some of the functional roles these communities play in ecosystem-level processes occurring across ditch networks?
Our initial studies of ditch invertebrates characterized the taxa that make up a typical ditch community, and related patterns of community composition with environmental factors related to nutrient cycling. As an aquatic habitat that is rarely studied in the context of a source of biodiversity, gaining a basic understanding of the composition of a typical ditch community was our first goal. In streams, macroinvertebrate communities often show strong relationships with water quality factors and different land-use characteristics within the watershed. Our second goal was to determine whether the macroinvertebrate community of ditches could serve as a useful indicator of the quality of water draining from ditches. From this research, we learned that ditches provide habitat for many different species of aquatic invertebrates, and that many of the communities are typical of streams that may be degraded. Patterns in macroinvertebrate communities across ditches did not show strong relationships with water quality factors that also varied between ditches. Therefore, macroinvertebrate communities may not be a good indicator of water quality in ditches. Communities were correlated with physical conditions within ditches, including the size of the ditch, and flow velocity of water within the ditch. Therefore, it is the physical structure of ditches, rather than the quality of water draining within ditches that likely determines what macroinvertebrates are present.
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Beneficial arthropods associated with the terrestrial habitat of agricultural drainage ditches. Especially for the flat Delmarva Peninsula (coastal plain portions of Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia) and portions of New Jersey, ditches are necessary to drain the high water table during the year. In addition, ditch habitats may also provide valuable ecosystem services to producers by enhancing natural enemies of pests and increasing their biocontrol. More broadly, ditches serve as examples of how uncultivated land in and around fields can provide ecological benefits. The goal of our research is to determine how to manage ditches to enhance populations of natural enemies. Our specific objectives include 1) to conduct experiments designed to enhance populations of natural enemies (e.g., spiders, predatory mites and beetles, and parasitoid wasps) in ditches by providing resources for shelter, food, and reproduction, 2) to compare natural enemy performance in ditch habitats and adjacent crop fields across a range of habitat conditions, and 3) to use ditches on farms to demonstrate the value of this enhancement of natural enemies for pest management.
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Conservation biological control provides an alternative, sustainable approach to manage pests by enhancing natural enemies through providing their ecological needs, e.g., shelter, nectar, alternative prey and pollen. Common natural enemies in ditch habitats include, but are not limited to, spiders, lady beetles, ground beetles, parasitoid wasps and flies, and other specialist and generalist predators. These natural enemies are known to help maintain pests below economic thresholds. We have documented that agricultural ditches are homes for many natural enemies, yet little is done to manage ditches for natural enemies. Our goal is to determine how ditches could be managed to enhance natural enemy populations, and to work with farmers to test management methods on farms, ultimately leading to adoption as part of ditch management.
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Ecological intensification, in contrast to agricultural intensification, has been suggested as a means to better meet our growing agricultural needs while reducing inputs and enhancing ecosystem services of value to crop and pest management. Ecological intensification is accomplished by supporting the natural ecosystem processes to the benefit of agriculture. For example, producers can indirectly aid species that provide regulating services such as pest management and pollination. Here, we focus on the use and management of agricultural drainage ditches to support ecological intensification and the action of natural enemies in suppressing pest populations.