Hurford The Changing Status of Arable Habitats in Europe

The Changing Status of Arable Habitats in Europe

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A Nature Conservation Review

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Beschreibung

This edited volume documents the current nature conservation status of arable habitats in Europe. Arable farming systems have evolved in the European landscape over more than ten thousand years and now occupy nearly 30% of the European land area.  They support species that have life cycles closely synchronised with traditional cereal growing, many of which have experienced massive declines throughout Europe. For example, in Britain, of the 100 plant species exhibiting the greatest declines in the latter half of the 20th century, 47 were typical of arable land.  Despite this the habitat and many of the species associated with it remains unprotected across much of Europe.

In 22 chapters a range of topics are covered including:

It is clear that the biodiversity of arable land throughout Europe has undergone major changes, particularly during the second half of the 20th century, and that these changes are continuing into the 21st century.  We need to develop a deeper appreciation of farmland wildlife and its integration into farming systems to ensure its future security in a world where value is increasingly expressed in terms of material profit. 

This book is particularly relevant to practitioners, policy-makers and managers working in the fields of nature conservation, agri-environment schemes and land management, and to researchers working in the fields of conservation biology, terrestrial ecology, nature conservation, applied ecology, biodiversity, agriculture, agricultural ethics and environmental studies.

 



This edited volume documents the current nature conservation status of arable habitats in Europe. Arable farming systems have evolved in the European landscape over more than ten thousand years and now occupy nearly 30% of the European land area.  They support species that have life cycles closely synchronised with traditional cereal growing, many of which have experienced massive declines throughout Europe. For example, in Britain, of the 100 plant species exhibiting the greatest declines in the latter half of the 20th century, 47 were typical of arable land.  Despite this the habitat and many of the species associated with it remains unprotected across much of Europe.


The 22 chapters cover a range of topics, including:

 

It is clear that the biodiversity of arable land throughout Europe has undergone major changes, particularly during the second half of the 20th century, and that these changes are continuing into the 21st century.  We need to develop a deeper appreciation of farmland wildlife and its integration into farming systems to ensure its future security in a world where value is increasingly expressed in terms of material profit. 

This book is particularly relevant to practitioners, policy-makers and managers working in the fields of nature conservation, agri-environment schemes and land management, and to researchers working in the fields of conservation biology, terrestrial ecology, nature conservation, applied ecology, biodiversity, agriculture, agricultural ethics and environmental studies.

 


Includes the latest research covering the conservation status of arable habitats in Europe Provides examples of well documented conservation practices as well as conservation failures Discusses the roles of new technologies in monitoring land-use changes

Autor*in

Clive Hurford

Themen in »The Changing Status of Arable Habitats in Europe«

Cultivated habitats geographical biodiversity decline land use practices land management practices land use monitoring

Stimmen zu »The Changing Status of Arable Habitats in Europe«

Details

ISBN: 9783030598778
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Erscheinung: 30.01.2022

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