Back to the future: rethinking socioecological systems underlying high nature value farmlands
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2019 papers
Abstract
Farmlands are currently among the dominant uses of the land. When managed under low‐input farming systems, farmlands are associated with diverse cultural and natural heritages around the world. Known in Europe as high nature value ( HNV ) farmlands, these agricultural landscapes and their associated farming systems evolved as tightly coupled socioecological systems, and are essential to biodiversity conservation and the delivery of ecosystem services to society. However, HNV farmlands are vulnerable to socioeconomic changes that lead to either agricultural intensification or land abandonment. We present a range of plausible future scenarios for HNV farmlands, and discuss the related management options and expected socioecological outcomes for each scenario. We then provide recommendations for policy, practice, and research on how to best ensure the socioecological viability of HNV farming systems in the future.
Related Papers
- → Biodiversity and ecosystem multifunctionality(2007)1,350 cited
- → Biodiversity regulates ecosystem predictability(1997)728 cited
- → Strength of species interactions determines biodiversity and stability in microbial communities(2020)627 cited
- → Strength of species interactions determines biodiversity and stability in microbial communities(2019)25 cited
- DIVERSE ECOSYTEM SERVICES AND COMPLEX AGRICULTURAL ECOSYSTEM(2007)