Skip to product information
1 of 1
Regular price £140.59 GBP
Regular price £151.00 GBP Sale price £140.59 GBP
Sale Sold out
Free UK Shipping

Freshly Printed - allow 10 days lead

The Future of Agricultural Landscapes, Part III

Edited by one of the best scientists, this series presents the latest updates in the field of ecological research

David Bohan (Edited by), Alex Dumbrell (Edited by)

9780323915038, Elsevier Science

Hardback, published 25 November 2021

454 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 2.8 cm, 1 kg

The Future of Agricultural Landscapes, Part III, Volume 65 in the Advances in Ecological Research serial, highlights new advances in the field, with this update including contributions from an international board of authors who cover Designing farmer-acceptable rotations that assure ecosystem service provision in the face of climate change, Building a shared vision of the future for multifunctional agricultural landscapes: Lessons from a Long Term Socio-Ecological Research site in south-western France, Vineyard landscapes and biocontrol, Pollinators, Next generation biomonitoring, Diversification of botanical resources in landscapes, Conflict resolution in agricultural landscapes, Addressing the Unanswered Questions in landscape-moderated biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, and more.

Socio-ecosystems and conflict

1. Conflicts between agriculture and biodiversity conservation in Europe: Looking to the future by learning from the past

2. Building a shared vision of the future for multifunctional agricultural landscapes. Lessons from a long term socio-ecological research site in south-western France

Empirical needs

3. Broadening the scope of empirical studies to answer persistent questions in landscape-moderated effects on biodiversity and ecosystem functioning

4. Promoting crop pest control by plant diversification in agricultural landscapes: A conceptual framework for analysing feedback loops between agro-ecological and socio-economic effects

Global change

5. Designing farmer-acceptable rotations that assure ecosystem service provision in the face of climate change

6. Multiple global change impacts on parasitism and biocontrol services in future agricultural landscapes

7. Harnessing biodiversity and ecosystem services to safeguard multifunctional vineyard landscapes in a global change context

Monitoring

8. Effective biodiversity monitoring could be facilitated by networks of simple sensors and a shift to incentivising results

9. Coupling ecological network analysis with high-throughput sequencing-based surveys: Lessons from the Next-Generation Biomonitoring project

Subject Areas: Applied ecology [RNC], The environment [RN]

View full details