Title of article
The role of agri-environment schemes and farm management practices in reversing the decline of farmland birds in England Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Juliet A. Vickery، نويسنده , , Richard B. Bradbury، نويسنده , , Ian G. Henderson، نويسنده , , Mark A. Eaton، نويسنده , , Philip V. Grice، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
21
From page
19
To page
39
Abstract
European farmland bird declines can largely be attributed to agricultural intensification. An English Government target aims to reverse the decline in the ‘Farmland Bird Indexʹ (population trends of 20 species) by 2020. Current agri-environment schemes (AESs) and practices such as organic and integrated farming are central to meeting this target and, in principle, provide most resource requirements of the 20 species. The continued population declines of specialist farmland species within the index reflects inadequacies in habitat quantity and/or quality. Models suggest that the area of ‘sympathetically-managed landʹ required to reverse population declines is likely to be considerable and, as bird requirements are often specific, better scientific knowledge or tighter management may be required to deliver them. We conclude that a new widespread ‘entry-levelʹ AES, with low cost, low maintenance options, should address the quantity issue. However, specialist prescriptions, particularly for rare sedentary species, should form higher tier agreements, targeted at existing populations. Effective AES development must maintain close links between policy and science, further consider the balance between ‘broad-and-shallowʹ and ‘narrow-and-deepʹ options, enhance advisory networks, carefully field-test novel solutions, and have flexibility to modify and target future prescriptions.
Keywords
Organic farming , Bird conservation , Integrated farming systems , set-aside , Public Service Agreement , Quality of life , Habitat quality , Technology transfer
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Record number
836877
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