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What can management option uptake tell us about ecosystem services delivery through agri-environment schemes?
Journal article   Peer reviewed

What can management option uptake tell us about ecosystem services delivery through agri-environment schemes?

David Arnott, David Chadwick, Ian Harris, Aleksandra Koj and David L. Jones
Land use policy, Vol.81, pp.194-208
2019

Abstract

Environmental Sciences & Ecology Environmental Studies Life Sciences & Biomedicine Science & Technology
Agri-environment schemes (AES), currently embedded in EU and UK policies, actively promote 'greening', 'sustainability' and 'ecosystem services' approaches to land management. The funding structures of these policies, however, run counter to this sustainable approach, and create barriers to AES success, primarily through a continued focus on productivity support. In this study, we aim to determine the effectiveness of action-based AES, as a delivery mechanism for ecosystem services, using secondary data analysis techniques to unravel the complexities of AES funding distribution and scheme structure and geographic information systems (GIS) to explore the spatial extent and uptake of AES management options, using Wales, UK as a study area. Our results show 84% of recipients of AES payments receiving < 10k pound annually, comprising only 35% of the total available funding. 15, out of a total of similar to 165, management options, accounted for > 75% of all advanced level management contracts awarded in both 2015 and 2017. This bias in option uptake, in many cases, positively prevents further deterioration of existing habitat condition through a 'business as usual' approach. However, we argue that the voluntary, over prescriptive nature of the schemes limits management option uptake, negatively impacts on the schemes ability to deliver ecosystem services, and lessens the government's ability to promote long-term behavioural change. If AES are to deliver the "'Public Goods"' that future policy demands, then targeted and adequate levels of funding and a willingness to participate must be combined with greater farmer autonomy and clear outcomes to deliver management options at a landscape scale.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

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#2 Zero Hunger

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.263 Agricultural Policy
6.263.898 Sustainable Agriculture
Web Of Science research areas
Environmental Studies
ESI research areas
Social Sciences, general
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