Abstract
1 Agriculture constitutes a dominant land cover worldwide, and rural landscapes
under extensive farming practices acknowledged due to high biodiversity
levels. The High Nature Value farmland (HNVf) concept has been
highlighted in the EU environmental and rural policies due to their inherent
potential to help characterize and direct financial support to European landscapes
where high nature and/or conservation value is dependent on the
continuation of specific low-intensity farming systems.
2 Assessing the extent of HNV farmland by necessity relies on the availability
of both ecological and farming systems’ data, and difficulties associated with
making such assessments have been widely described across Europe. A spatially
explicit framework of data collection, building out from local administrative
units, has recently been suggested as a means of addressing such
difficulties.
3 This manuscript tests the relevance of the proposed approach, describes the
spatially explicit framework in a case study area in northern Portugal, and
discusses the potential of the approach to help better inform the implementation
of conservation and rural development policies.
4 Synthesis and applications: The potential of a novel approach (combining
land use/cover, farming and environmental data) to provide more accurate
and efficient mapping and monitoring of HNV farmlands is tested at the
local level in northern Portugal. The approach is considered to constitute a
step forward toward a more precise targeting of landscapes for agri-environment
schemes, as it allowed a more accurate discrimination of areas within the case study landscape that have a higher value for nature conservation.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1031 - 1044 |
Number of pages | 14 |
Journal | Ecology and Evolution |
Volume | 5 |
Issue number | 5 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | First published - 2015 |
Bibliographical note
1023312Keywords
- Agri-environment schemes
- Agro-biodiversity
- Conservation and monitoring programs
- Indicators
- Low-intensity farming practices