Optimizing biodiversity gain of European agriculture through regional targeting and adaptive management of conservation tools
Authors (text)
Concepción, Elena D.; Ina Aneva, Marion Jay, Simeon Lukanov, Katrina Marsden, Gerardo Moreno, Rainer Oppermann, Adara Pardo, Stephan Piskol, Víctor Rolo, Antonia Schraml and Mario Díaz
Agricultural intensification continues being a major threat for biodiversity worldwide. Despite the incorporation of diverse conservation tools in the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) since the 1990s, European agriculture continues intensifying. The last CAP reform introduced compulsory greening, including measures to support semi-natural habitats across the wider countryside (referred to in this paper as Green and Blue Infrastructure, GBI), and by these means biodiversity. However, the actual benefits of greening implementation have not been evaluated formally through field studies, and its effectiveness is questioned.
We assess the capacity of a variety of GBI features that can be supported by CAP greening to promote biodiversity across a variety of agricultural systems. We analyze the relationships between diversity (birds and plants) and a set of habitat indicators linked to distinct greening options in 115 plots from six case study areas, including arable land, pastures and mixed farming systems in Spain, Germany and Bulgaria.