The Changing Status of Arable Habitats in Europe: A Nature Conservation Review

Author:   Clive Hurford ,  Phil Wilson ,  Jonathan Storkey
Publisher:   Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Edition:   1st ed. 2020
ISBN:  

9783030598778


Pages:   364
Publication Date:   30 January 2022
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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The Changing Status of Arable Habitats in Europe: A Nature Conservation Review


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Author:   Clive Hurford ,  Phil Wilson ,  Jonathan Storkey
Publisher:   Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Imprint:   Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Edition:   1st ed. 2020
Weight:   0.581kg
ISBN:  

9783030598778


ISBN 10:   3030598772
Pages:   364
Publication Date:   30 January 2022
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Part I. Introduction.- Chapter 1. Historical and Ecological Background to the Arable Habitats of   Europe (Chris Stoate).- Part II. Regional Conservation Reviews of arable plant habitats.- Chapter 2. A weed’s eye view of arable habitats (Jonathan Storkey).- Chapter 3. The status of arable plant habitats in Northwestern Europe (Guillaume Fried).- Chapter 4. The status of arable plant habitats in Scandinavian countries (Terho Hyvonen).- Chapter 5. The status of arable plant habitats in Central Europe (Stefan Meyer).- Chapter 6. The status of arable plant habitats in Eastern Europe (Gyula Pinke).- Chapter 7. The arable flora of Mediterranean agricultural systems in the Iberian       Peninsula: current status, threats and perspectives (Jordi Recasens).- Chapter 8. The status of arable plant habitats in Greece – the cradle of arable farming in Europe (Stefan Meyer).- Part III. Research and Surveillance Projects.- Chapter 9. Soil organisms within arable habitats(Felicity Crotty).- Chapter 10.  Agricultural intensification, sustainable farming and the fate of arable bryophytes in Switzerland (Irene Bisang).- Chapter 11. Invertebrate trends in an arable environment: long-term changes from the Sussex Study in Southern England (Julie Ewald).- Chapter 12. Ex situ conservation and reintroduction of vulnerable arable plants in Skåne, Sweden (Gabrielle Rosquist).- Chapter 13. Wild pollinators in arable habitats: trends, threats and opportunities (Mark JF Brown).- Chapter 14. Designing multifunctional and resilient agricultural landscapes: lessons from long-term monitoring of biodiversity and land use (Sabrina Gaba).- Part IV. Farmland Bird Case Studies.- Chapter 15. Historic overview and conservation perspectives of the Czech grey partridge (Perdix perdix) population (Miroslav Šálek).- Chapter 16. Perspectives on the declining ortolan bunting (Emberiza hortulana) population in northern Sweden (Christer Olsson).- Chapter 17. The impact of land-use change on arable plant habitats and wintering farmland birds on a farm in south-west Wales, UK (Clive Hurford).- Chapter 18. The conservation of the grey partridge (Perdix perdix) on farmland in southern England (Nick Sotherton).- Chapter 19. The changing status of steppe-land birds in the Lleida plain of      Catalonia (Santi Mañosa).- Part V. Applications, Considerations and Recommendations.- Chapter 20. Monitoring arable landscapes using free satellite imagery (Alan Brown).- Chapter 21. The Art of Agri-environment in the UK, an advisor’s perspective (Emily Swann).- Chapter 22. The future of Europe’s arable wildlife (Phil Wilson).

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Author Information

Clive Hurford is a botanist who has worked in the field of nature conservation since the late 1970s, initially as an ornithologist with the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and then as a botanical surveyor for the Countryside Council for Wales (CCW).  Since 1992 he has focused primarily on habitat monitoring and led a field team to demonstrate the links between conservation management and monitoring on Natura 2000 sites for an EU/CCW Life Project.  More recently he was ‘Conservation Monitoring Advisor for International Sites’ for CCW and Natural Resources Wales.  He is the lead editor / author of two edited volumes on monitoring nature conservation and regularly coordinates international workshops on the subject.  He has a long-standing interest in habitats with a cultural history, especially arable habitats.  After 27 years working for the Welsh conservation agencies, he is now the founder and director of Serapias; an ecological monitoring consultancy. Dr Jonathan Storkey is a plant ecologist working in agro-ecosystems. His research focusses on applying ecological principles to the management and conservation of non-crop biodiversity in agricultural landscapes while maintaining crop productivity. Work in this area is increasingly showing that the ‘choice’ between managing arable habitats for optimal productivity or conservation of biodiversity is a false dichotomy and sustainable cropping systems cannot be maintained in the absence of a healthy ecosystem. Jonathan’s work on the drivers of declines in arable plant communities based on an understanding of the response plant traits and the implications for higher trophic groups is internationally recognized and  he is currently working with colleagues in the UK and Europe to use this knowledge to design more sustainable agricultural landscapes for the future. Phil Wilson has been studying the ecology of Britain’s arable flora since the 1980s, and was awardeda PhD for his pioneering work on the conservation of this neglected group of plants in 1990.  He has continued this work to the present day, and has been involved in the design and monitoring of agri-environment scheme options for arable plants, has co-authored a field-guide, worked with Plantlife on methods for the assessment of Important Arable Plant Areas and runs regular training courses.  He has been a freelance vegetation ecologist for 30 years and has a comprehensive knowledge of British plant communities, their ecology and their management.  His work has also included investigations into the conservation ecology of a range of rare grassland plants.  He lives in the south-west of England and is the co-owner of a small farm with species-rich grassland managed by native breed cattle and sheep.

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