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26/08/2010 Perspectives in restoration of biodiversity and ecosystem services in Mediterranean agricultural landscapes 2010 SER European Congress - Avignon José M. Rey Benayas It is evident that … Agricultural frontier is expanding in most of the world Agricultural production is subjected to increasing intensification Amount of degraded land and loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services are increasing as well In some parts, large extents of cropland and pasture land have been, are being or will be abandoned Many landscapes and species linked to farmland have conservation value Anthropogenic biomes on the world map Mostly absence of wild lands >75% of Earth’s ice-free land showed alteration as a result of human residence and land use, with less than a quarter remaining as wildlands (wild forests, sparse trees, and barren; only 3 out of 63 major ecosystem types), supporting just 11% of terrestrial NPP. Ellis & Ramankutty 2008 Agricultural land extends over 40% of the land’s surface 31% of cropland 18% of pasture land Foley et al. 2005 for maps; FAOSTAT database for statistics in Europe +27 (yr 2007) Biodiversity and ecosystem services Sought in agricultural systems Millennium Ecosystem Assessment 2005 Relationship between biodiversity and provision of ecosystem services in restored vs. degraded ecosystems Increasing biodiversity from low values has relatively strong impacts on ecosystem function Rey Benayas et al. 2009 Outline The agriculture and conservation paradox Enhancing biodiversity and ecosystem services in agricultural landscapes Restoration in the real world The agriculture and conservation paradox Enhancing biodiversity and ecosystem services in agricultural landscapes Restoration in the real world Coexistence of farmland abandonment and intensification in Europe Rain-fed cropland: -11% Cropland (x1000 ha) 160000 Irrigated cropland: x2.12 140000 ? 120000 100000 80000 60000 40000 20000 19 6 19 1 6 19 3 6 19 5 6 19 7 6 19 9 7 19 1 7 19 3 7 19 5 7 19 7 7 19 9 8 19 1 8 19 3 8 19 5 8 19 7 8 19 9 9 19 1 9 19 3 9 19 5 9 19 7 9 20 9 0 20 1 0 20 3 0 20 5 07 0 Year FAOSTAT database (Europe +27 countries) Agriculture, a major cause of environmental impacts worldwide Agriculture accounts for ca. 12% of total global anthropogenic emissions of Greenhouse Gasses BirdLife International 2008 and IPCC 2007 Summary of the state of EU-wide environment indicators relating to agriculture A total of 36 indicators related to agricultural landscapes, farmland biodiversity, water quality, water availability, soil functionality, climate stability – carbon storage, climate stability – greenhouse gas emissions, air-quality, resilience to fire, and agricultural land use 10 are clearly negative and 2 are mostly negative 6 are clearly positive and 1 is mostly positive 4 indicate no change 5 indicate a heterogeneous response 8 are of unclear trend Cooper et al. 2009 Overall harmful effects of agriculture intensification on biodiversity “We conclude that despite decades of European policy to ban harmful pesticides, the negative effects of pesticides on wild plant and animal species persist, …”. Geiger et al. 2010 Farmland abandonment leading to “passive” restoration In the world, ca. 45,000 km2/year (FAO 2006) It is genuine and free, but usually slow in low productivity regions Tree plantations In the world, ca. 28,000 km2/year (FAO 2006) It is more rapid and expensive, and targets specific objectives Net change in forest area by country, 2005–2010 (ha/yr) Deforestation = 13 million ha/yr FAO 2010 Regional trends of common farmland birds in Europe European Bird Census Council 2010 Agriculture and conservation in Europe Habitats Directive EU: 4 out of 7 broad categories of terrestrial habitats include farmland (grassland, matorral, dehesas, etc.) In the EU-27, 31% of Natura 2000 sites are under agricultural land management Many species depend upon extensive agricultural systems Recent changes in vineyards La Mancha (central Spain) The agriculture and conservation paradox Enhancing biodiversity and ecosystem services in agricultural landscapes Restoration in the real world Reversing farmland negative indicators – A range of possibilities around three major types of intervention Extensive actions: Making cropland and pasture land themselves more environmentally friendly – e.g. returning to traditional farming practices, transformation of conventional agriculture into organic agriculture and of “simple” crops and pastures into agro-forestry systems Farmland manicure: Restoring or creating target elements to benefit wildlife and particular services – e.g. living fences, beetle banks, stone walls, stone mounds, perches and nestboxes for birds, drinking troughs and rural architecture Restoring or creating non-farmland habitat in agricultural landscapes – e.g. woodland and wetlands, ponds, meadow and grassland Reversing farmland negative indicators – A range of possibilities around three major types of intervention Extensive actions: Making cropland and pasture land themselves more environmentally friendly – e.g. returning to traditional farming practices, transformation of conventional agriculture into organic agriculture and of “simple” crops and pastures into agro-forestry systems Farmland manicure: Restoring or creating target elements to benefit wildlife and particular services – e.g. living fences, beetle banks, stone walls, stone mounds, perches and nestboxes for birds, drinking troughs and rural architecture Restoring or creating non-farmland habitat in agricultural landscapes – e.g. woodland and wetlands, ponds, meadow and grassland % of total agricultural area Expansion of organic farmland area in Europe European Environment Agency and eurostat 2010 7,764,722 ha = 4.1% in EU27+ in 2008 Benefits of organic farming to the environment Less contamination by fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides Increasing of biodiversity, particularly of plants, invertebrates and microbes Increasing of carbon sequestration and nutrients in soil Natural enhancement of pest control 66.7% studies showed positive effects of organic farming on biodiversity Soil C levels under organic vs. non-organic farming “At a global level, assuming a possible sequestration level of 1tC/ha/year for organic farming best practices (including composting and agro-forestry), we estimate that widespread organic farming could potentially sequester 1.5 billion tC per year, which would offset about 11% of all anthropogenic global GHG emissions for at least the next 20 years”. Azeez 2009 Transformation of “simple” crops and pastures into agroforestry systems Agro-forestry is the purposeful growing of trees/shrubs and crops/pasture The tropical connotation to most land-use experts is a wrong perception It has several opportunities in the temperate regions too Overall, it enhances the provision of biodiversity and ecosystem services as compared to crops/pastures alone Rigueiro-Rodríguez et al. 2009 The forest restoration staircase Chazdon 2008 Transformation of a cereal crop into an olive-based agroforestry system Field of 1.9 ha Source: FIRE and INAMSOS, S. A. Organic olive tree plantation: expected sequestration of ca. 3 tCO2/ha yr (Cárdenas 2009) Source: FIRE and INAMSOS, S. A. Plantation of singular fruit trees (creation of a genetic reserve) Source: FIRE and INAMSOS, S. A. Hedge introduction (9 woody species, 800 plants) Source: FIRE and INAMSOS, S. A. Conditioning of stone mounds Source: FIRE and INAMSOS, S. A. Creation of a pond Source: FIRE and INAMSOS, S. A. Free-range chickens Source: FIRE and INAMSOS, S. A. Enhancement of prey birds for rodent control A project motivated by periodic Microtus arvalis (field vole) plagues The 2007 plague was intensively attacked with poison that caused severe damage to wildlife and game Enhancement of prey birds for rodent control Common kestrel (Falco tinnunculus) and barn owl (Tyto alba) are rodent predators They exhibit declining populations for a number of reasons, including lack of sites for nesting in open landscapes More nesting sites would increase their populations Enhancement of prey birds for rodent control Objective: to place common kestrel and barn owl populations at their carrying capacities A nest-box/10 ha, 200 boxes in total Occupancy in the first year = 19% for kestrel, 0% for barn owl Productivity for kestrel: 3.6 juveniles/nest Rodent consumption: ca. 3,500 kg/yr! Woodland restoration – the paradox creates a dilemma Conflicts due to deforestation Conflicts due to farmland abandonment Conflicts due to farmland afforestation Conflicts due to agriculture intensification Agriculture – woodland in permanent conflict Is it possible to conciliate agricultural production, conservation of values linked to farmland and woodland restoration? Intensification of land use has brought remnant areas of natural vegetation into mainstream agriculture Not a single woody plant in many km2, absence of seed sources, bottle neck for passive restoration Maybe good for C sequestration and erosion mitigation … Agricultural sea in Salamanca, central Spain … but not for farmland biodiversity conservation Woodland islets in agricultural seas … Islets introduced 17 years ago … to conciliate agriculture, provision of biodiversity and a range of ecosystem services Plantation of dense blocks with woody native vegetation They export propagules that accelerate passive restoration They are islands of biodiversity and fertility that sequestrate C Matrix under exploitation Rey Benayas et al. 2008 1 2 3 Rey Benayas et al. 2008 4 5 They can be strategically placed Garrulus glandiarus Pica pica Every km Campo de Montiel, central Spain Effects of two contrasted trajectories of Mediterranean woodland restoration on bird community composition Better habitat for species of conservation value in Europe Rey Benayas et al. 2010 Wetland restoration Creation of direct and indirect employment related to eco-tourism Number of visitors/yr: - 10,000 in Boada - 4,000 in Villacañas - 1,500 in Louro Irrigation offers opportunities for wetland construction and their associated biodiversity and ecosystem services Los Monegros desert, northeast Spain Constructed wetlands 50-5000 m2 in size improved water quality “At the current retention rate of NO3-N (76–227 gm−2yr−1), 1.5–4% of the catchment should be converted into wetlands to optimize the elimination of NO3-N” Moreno et al. 2010 Extraordinary rainy events (e.g. 2009-2010) should favour wetland restoration The agriculture and conservation paradox Enhancing biodiversity and ecosystem services in agricultural landscapes Restoration in the real world Ground Penetration Radar to estimate root development of oak plantings Field research for assisting revegetation If Further research is needed … Action is desperately needed Gift from the students of the Master’s on Ecosystem Restoration (2009) Projection of Global Ecological Footprint to 2015 Hockley et al. 2008 State of, pressures on, and responses for biodiversity since 1970 Butchart et al. 2010 Key issues for widespread ecological restoration of/in farmland habitat: financial support, education and training Major UE policy measures to support the provision of environmental public goods through agriculture Agri-environment measures: € 34 billion including cofinancing for 2007-2013, 22% of the expenditure for rural development, 34 million ha affected Life + Programme: € 2.14 billion for the period 2007-2013 Natura 2000: € 6.1 billion/yr for the period 2007-2013, ca. 15 million ha under agricultural management Good Agricultural and Environmental Condition: GAEC standards that specify actions beyond existing legislation focusing specifically on maintaining landscape features, habitats, soil functionality or water quality Structural funds: Projects under the heading ‘Preservation of the environment in connection with land…and landscape conservation’ Recent CAP afforestation measures in Europe Council Regulation (EEC) N° 2080/92 of 1992 instituted a scheme of aid for forestry measures in agriculture Ca. 520,000 ha afforested between 1993 and 1997 A second program, running between 2000 and 2006, afforested > 200,000 ha of land A third such program began in 2007, ca. 1 million ha afforested to date The amount of afforested farmland will increase due to e.g. vineyard extirpation (175,000 ha in the 2008-2011 period for central Spain, 71,908 of which have already been extirpated) Other issues related to financial support in Europe Relatively low tax deduction associated to donations to nonprofitable organizations, figures: 60-65% in France, 25% in Spain, >90% in the US Under-developed schemes for payment for environmental services Being ecologically intelligent – Education and public awareness for valuing farmland biodiversity and services The role of farmers Mostly limited engagement with agri-environmental schemes Limited understanding of reasoning Antipathetic bureaucracy High cultural inertia Usually low flexibility to adopt new approaches Education and training of farmers Gewin 2010 Take-home messages In spite agriculture is a major cause of environmental impact, ecological restoration in/of farmland habitat offers opportunities to conciliate agricultural production with enhancement of biodiversity and ecosystem services Beyond scientific and technical research, spread of such restoration projects is urgently needed if we want to halt environmental degradation and biodiversity loss We need widespread expansion of organic farming, agroforestry systems and farmland “manicure”; converting some farmland into other natural ecosystems will not hurt Financial support, public awareness, education and training, particularly of farmers, are necessary to meet these goals Restoration actions can act as an engine of economy and a source of green employment, so policymakers have an extra incentive to restore degraded farmland habitat Thanks to many colleagues, students, and projects Thank you! “... Biodiversity will be retained to the extent that whole regions are managed cooperatively among protected areas, farmers, foresters, and other neighboring land users” (Miller) Related publications at http://www2.uah.es/josemrey, [email protected]