2021
DOI: 10.1007/s10531-021-02145-3
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The importance of traditional agricultural landscapes for preventing species extinctions

Abstract: The main paradigm for protection of biodiversity, focusing on maintaining or restoring conditions where humans leave no or little impact, risks overlooking anthropogenic landscapes harboring a rich native biodiversity. An example is northern European agricultural landscapes with traditionally managed semi-natural grasslands harboring an exceptional local richness of many taxa, such as plants, fungi and insects. During the last century these grasslands have declined by more than 95%, i.e. in the same magnitude … Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(13 citation statements)
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References 114 publications
(125 reference statements)
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“…At the landscape level, maintaining traditional dairy farm landscapes in Southern Quebec is an important objective in order to prevent regional avian biodiversity declines as suggested elsewhere [16,43]. Creating a pond network, restoring environmental conditions around open-canopy ponds, and widening riparian strips and the adjacent uncultivated field margins would have a beneficial effect on the regional populations of several farmland bird species without significantly impacting agricultural practices and crop yields [5].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the landscape level, maintaining traditional dairy farm landscapes in Southern Quebec is an important objective in order to prevent regional avian biodiversity declines as suggested elsewhere [16,43]. Creating a pond network, restoring environmental conditions around open-canopy ponds, and widening riparian strips and the adjacent uncultivated field margins would have a beneficial effect on the regional populations of several farmland bird species without significantly impacting agricultural practices and crop yields [5].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the insect diversity and abundance has resumed rhythm after first extinction giving birth to new species at higher rates, however still it will take millions of years to restore the extinct ones [6]. The latest human caused [1] Holocene extinction of species is growing since DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.98786 20th century, and much of the extinction reports were not from arthropods, with 95% decline in anthropogenic habitats like grasslands [27]. In the case of vertebrates, the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) published a research-based opinion in 2012 that insect species are decreasing globally, with direct and indirect effects on pollination, ecosystem balance, ecosystem services, livestock, and overall food production, and may decline in the near future [28].…”
Section: Background Of Insect Declinementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In other regions, the low-intensity land use regimes of hunter-gatherers, early farmers, and pastoralists shaped dynamic and productive mosaics of intensively used patches interspersed with habitats sustaining biodiverse novel communities in varying states of ecological succession in response to burning, tillage, middens, transplanting, and other cultural practices (17,20,27,30,66,129,131,132). Areas now governed in similar ways by Indigenous and traditional peoples are some of the most biodiverse areas remaining on the planet (133)(134)(135), and landscapes under traditional low-intensity use are generally much more biodiverse than those governed by high-intensity agricultural and industrial land use regimes (131,(134)(135)(136)(137)(138). Although some societies practicing low-intensity land use contributed to extinctions in the past, including island endemics (139) and megafauna (57,59), with cascading ecological consequences (57,58), land use can also produce sustained ecological benefits through practices that expand habitats for other species (30,140), enhance species diversity (27,30,86,(141)(142)(143), increase hunting sustainability (65), disperse seeds (144), and enhance soil fertility (145,146).…”
Section: Biodiversitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given that biodiversity was sustained for millennia around the world in cultural landscapes shaped by low-intensity land use regimes that left ample refugia for native species, land use itself cannot be the main cause of the current biodiversity crisis (5,27,138). In contrast, the homogeneous and ecologically simplified landscapes produced by large-scale mechanization, industrial infrastructure, and chemical pest control tend to leave no space for native species to live within or even to cross the landscape (5,18,19,93,101,102).…”
Section: Biodiversitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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