Literature DB >> 26400720

Assessing strategies to reconcile agriculture and bird conservation in the temperate grasslands of South America.

G Dotta1,2, B Phalan1, T W Silva3, R Green1, A Balmford1.   

Abstract

Globally, agriculture is the greatest source of threat to biodiversity, through both ongoing conversion of natural habitat and intensification of existing farmland. Land sparing and land sharing have been suggested as alternative approaches to reconcile this threat with the need for land to produce food. To examine which approach holds most promise for grassland species, we examined how bird population densities changed with farm yield (production per unit area) in the Campos of Brazil and Uruguay. We obtained information on biodiversity and crop yields from 24 sites that differed in agricultural yield. Density-yield functions were fitted for 121 bird species to describe the response of population densities to increasing farm yield, measured in terms of both food energy and profit. We categorized individual species according to how their population changed across the yield gradient as being positively or negatively affected by farming and according to whether the species' total population size was greater under land-sparing, land-sharing, or an intermediate strategy. Irrespective of the yield, most species were negatively affected by farming. Increasing yields reduced densities of approximately 80% of bird species. We estimated land sparing would result in larger populations than other sorts of strategies for 67% to 70% of negatively affected species, given current production levels, including three threatened species. This suggests that increasing yields in some areas while reducing grazing to low levels elsewhere may be the best option for bird conservation in these grasslands. Implementing such an approach would require conservation and production policies to be explicitly linked to support yield increases in farmed areas and concurrently guarantee that larger areas of lightly grazed natural grasslands are set aside for conservation.
© 2015 Society for Conservation Biology.

Keywords:  Campos del Norte; Northern Campos; bird density; bird responses to yield; cattle ranching; densidad de aves; eucaliptos; eucalypt; ganadería; land sharing; land sparing; preservación de la tierra; respuestas de las aves a la cosecha; soya; tierras compartidas

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26400720     DOI: 10.1111/cobi.12635

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Conserv Biol        ISSN: 0888-8892            Impact factor:   6.560


  3 in total

1.  Land sparing to make space for species dependent on natural habitats and high nature value farmland.

Authors:  Claire Feniuk; Andrew Balmford; Rhys E Green
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2019-08-28       Impact factor: 5.349

2.  Understanding the relative risks of zoonosis emergence under contrasting approaches to meeting livestock product demand.

Authors:  Harriet Bartlett; Mark A Holmes; Silviu O Petrovan; David R Williams; James L N Wood; Andrew Balmford
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2022-06-22       Impact factor: 3.653

3.  The environmental costs and benefits of high-yield farming.

Authors:  Andrew Balmford; Tatsuya Amano; Harriet Bartlett; Dave Chadwick; Adrian Collins; David Edwards; Rob Field; Philip Garnsworthy; Rhys Green; Pete Smith; Helen Waters; Andrew Whitmore; Donald M Broom; Julian Chara; Tom Finch; Emma Garnett; Alfred Gathorne-Hardy; Juan Hernandez-Medrano; Mario Herrero; Fangyuan Hua; Agnieszka Latawiec; Tom Misselbrook; Ben Phalan; Benno I Simmons; Taro Takahashi; James Vause; Erasmus Zu Ermgassen; Rowan Eisner
Journal:  Nat Sustain       Date:  2018-09-14
  3 in total

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