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Bird Conservation and Agriculture

Bird Conservation and Agriculture

Bird Conservation and Agriculture

Jeremy D. Wilson, Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, Scotland
Andrew D. Evans, Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, Bedfordshire
Philip V. Grice, Natural England, Peterborough
August 2009
Available
Paperback
9780521734721
$68.00
USD
Paperback

    Writing for researchers, professionals and graduate students, the authors summarize the collapse of populations of many farmland bird species in the twentieth century, one of the biggest conservation problems of the day. They firstly set the historical context of change in agriculture and bird communities since the eighteenth century, and introduce the bird communities of agricultural land today. They then provide an overview of this very active area of applied conservation science, including in-depth case studies of 16 species that, taken together, illustrate the many ways that agricultural intensification has affected bird populations. Moreover, they show how this evidence base, coupled with recent greening of agriculture policy, has provided opportunities to manage agricultural land to better integrate the needs of food production and bird conservation. They conclude by looking forward to challenges that the conservation of bird populations on agricultural land is likely to face in the near future.

    • Richly illustrated with photographs and line drawings, with in-depth case studies of 16 different bird species
    • Covers both semi-natural habitats, such as moorland, heathland and downland, and more intensively-farmed land, breaking the traditional mould of treating them separately
    • State-of-the-art account of one of the biggest conservation problems of today, as grain prices have trebled in the last three years in resposne to global demand

    Reviews & endorsements

    "This important textbook summarizes the collapse of populations of many farmland bird species in the 20th century; one of the biggest conservation problems we now face."
    Des Thompson, Bulletin of the British Ecological Society

    See more reviews

    Product details

    August 2009
    Paperback
    9780521734721
    406 pages
    245 × 188 × 20 mm
    0.72kg
    40 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction: birds and agriculture in Britain
    • 1. The history of agriculture in Britain
    • Part I. The Habitats and their Birds:
    • 2. The field
    • 3. The field boundary
    • 4. Semi-natural heathlands and grasslands
    • Part II. Trends and Patterns:
    • 5. Bird population trends
    • 6. Patterns of association between agricultural change and wildlife populations
    • Part III. The Effects of Agricultural Change on Birds:
    • 7. Large-scale studies of abundance, distribution and demograph
    • 8. Species case studies
    • 9. Studies of changing agricultural practice
    • 10. What future for birds and agriculture in Britain?
      Authors
    • Jeremy D. Wilson , Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, Scotland

      Jeremy D. Wilson is Head of Research for RSPB Scotland. He has worked as a Royal 1851 Commission Fellow on the role of dispersal in population dynamics of Dippers, and led a research study of the consequences of organic farming for bird populations for the British Trust for Ornithology. He is an Editor for the British Ornithologists' Union journal, Ibis, and an Associate Editor of the British Ecological Society's Journal of Applied Ecology.

    • Andrew D. Evans , Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, Bedfordshire

      Andrew D. Evans joined the RSPB as a field biologist in 1988, studying the reasons behind the near extinction of the cirl bunting in the UK. This put him at the forefront of the unfolding story of bird population declines as a result of agricultural intensification. He is currently Head of Species Recovery at the RSPB.

    • Philip V. Grice , Natural England, Peterborough

      Philip V. Grice has worked professionally as an ornithologist in the government's nature conservation bodies since 1991, and is now a Senior Specialist in ornithology at Natural England. He has worked on a broad range of bird conservation issues but has become increasingly concerned with addressing the declines in farmland birds since the mid-1990s.