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Ploughing a New Furrow - A Blueprint for Wildlife Friendly Farming (Paperback)
Loot Price: R528
Discovery Miles 5 280
You Save: R52
(9%)
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Ploughing a New Furrow - A Blueprint for Wildlife Friendly Farming (Paperback)
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List price R580
Loot Price R528
Discovery Miles 5 280
You Save R52 (9%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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Farmland wildlife has been decimated by intensive crop growing
using pesticides, grubbing up hedges, ploughing heathland and
draining marshes, etc. With too many sheep grazing our moors, hills
and mountains, a range of upland plants, invertebrates and birds
has been diminished and the land converted to closely-grazed turf,
perfect for heavy rain to cause catastrophic downstream floods.
Once common farmland birds have declined by 54% since 1970 with
farmland invertebrates declining by 40% in a few decades. Since the
1930s a staggering 97% of our once flower-rich meadows has been
lost. Ploughing a New Furrow examines these stark figures and in
the context of Brexit considers the unprecedented opportunity for
wildlife once again to be nurtured by Britain's farmers alongside
food production, reversing the enormous plant and animal losses our
farmland has suffered. With its financial largesse, the Common
Agricultural Policy (CAP) has encouraged farmers to destroy huge
areas of wildlife habitat in Britain's lowlands and seriously
damage large tracts of our uplands, depleting Britain's farmed land
of much of its wildlife. With responsibility for farm policy to be
transferred back to the UK, these enormous losses could be reversed
and Britain's farms made wildlife-rich once more. This book is
based to a significant extent on conversations with farmers and on
the achievements and experiences of some farmers who have made good
use of agri-environment payments to reinstate lost habitats and
manage their remaining wildlife more sensitively. The author sets
out the case for removing or capping subsidies, supporting organic
and other more sustainable forms of agriculture and the
conservation of soils and the rich life forms they hold. He
proposes a set of policy changes and other measures that should be
adopted by the Government post-Brexit to make the 70% of our land
that farming occupies rich in wildlife again. Literally food for
thought!
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