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Institution

The Lodge

About: The Lodge is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Biodiversity. The organization has 258 authors who have published 394 publications receiving 17100 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results support intermediate or 3-compartment land-sparing strategies to maximize bird populations across lowland agricultural landscapes, and help define which groups of species are the target of conservation.
Abstract: Empirical evidence from many regions suggests that most species would be least negatively affected if human food demand were met through high-yield agricultural production and conservation of nonfarm ecosystems (land sparing), rather than through wildlife-friendly farming over a larger area (land sharing). However, repeated glaciation and a long history of agriculture may lead to different results in regions such as western Europe. We compared the consequences of land sparing and land sharing on breeding bird species in 2 lowland regions of England, The Fens, with 101 species, and Salisbury Plain, with 83. We derived density-yield responses for each species and then estimated regional population size under regional food production strategies, including land sharing and land sparing, a range of intermediate strategies, and a novel mixed strategy. In both regions, more species achieved maximum regional population size under land sparing than land sharing. In The Fens, the majority of birds were loser species (estimated to have smaller populations under all food production strategies than in the preagricultural baseline scenario), whereas in Salisbury Plain the majority were winners (smaller populations in the preagricultural baseline scenario). Loser species overwhelmingly achieved maximum regional population size under land sparing, whereas winner species achieved maximum regional population size under either land sharing or an intermediate strategy, highlighting the importance of defining which groups of species are the target of conservation. A novel 3-compartment strategy (combining high-yield farming, natural habitat, and low-yield farming) often performed better than either land sharing or land sparing. Our results support intermediate or 3-compartment land-sparing strategies to maximize bird populations across lowland agricultural landscapes. To deliver conservation outcomes, any shift toward land sparing must, however, ensure yield increases are sustainable in the long term, do not entail increased negative effects on surrounding areas, and are linked to allocation of land for nature.

26 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: While not beneficial to all taxonomic groups these results demonstrate that, in the case of corncrakes in the UK at least, well-designed AES measures targeted at a specific species do yield wider biodiversity benefits.

25 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors assess variation in the distributions of different species of lark along two main agricultural gradients in the steppe and semi-desert zones of Kazakhstan: the intensity of grazing and the time since abandonment of cereal fields.

25 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that continued feral livestock control is important for maintaining the current level of ecosystem services provided by the Reserve of Centre Hills on Montserrat.
Abstract: Local stakeholders at the important but vulnerable Centre Hills on Montserrat consider that the continued presence of feral livestock (particularly goats and pigs) may lead to widespread replacement of the reserve’s native vegetation by invasive alien trees (Java plum and guava), and consequent negative impacts on native animal species. Since 2009, a hunting programme to control the feral livestock has been in operation. However long-term funding is not assured. Here, we estimate the effect of feral livestock control on ecosystem services provided by the forest to evaluate whether the biodiversity conservation rationale for continuation of the control programme is supported by an economic case. A new practical tool (Toolkit for Ecosystem Service Site-based Assessment) was employed to measure and compare ecosystem service provision between two states of the reserve (i.e. presence and absence of feral livestock control) to estimate the net consequences of the hunting programme on ecosystem services provided by the forest. Based on this we estimate that cessation of feral livestock management would substantially reduce the net benefits provided by the site, including a 46 % reduction in nature-based tourism (from $419,000 to $228,000) and 36 % reduction in harvested wild meat (from $205,000 to $132,000). The overall net benefit generated from annual ecosystem service flows associated with livestock control in the reserve, minus the management cost, was $214,000 per year. We conclude that continued feral livestock control is important for maintaining the current level of ecosystem services provided by the reserve.

25 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Lenient early season grazing increased total invertebrate abundance by 71% after 4 years, the most responsive groups being Araneae, Auchenorrhyncha, Collembola and Heteroptera; and early cessation of grazing led to increased cover of Holcus lanatus and Agrostis spp.

25 citations


Authors

Showing all 258 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Rhys E. Green7828530428
Richard D. Gregory6116518428
Deborah J. Pain46996717
Jeremy D. Wilson4512312587
Richard B. Bradbury421138062
Paul F. Donald4111711153
Geoff M. Hilton32883323
David W. Gibbons32528647
Norman Ratcliffe311022526
Paul E. Bellamy30763348
Mark Bolton30943336
Ruud P. B. Foppen30785560
Steffen Oppel291212950
Shelley A. Hinsley29823309
Arjun Amar291223202
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20221
202127
202025
201927
201819
201727