Preprint / Working Paper
Details
Citation
Hanley N, Davies A, Angelopoulos K, Hamilton A, Ross A, Tinch D & Watson F (2008) Economic determinants of biodiversity change over a 400 year period in the Scottish uplands. Stirling Economics Discussion Paper, 2008-01.
Abstract
This study shows how data from very different disciplines can be combined to address questions relevant to contemporary conservation and understanding. This novel, interdisciplinary approach provides new insights into the role of economic factors as a driver of biodiversity loss in the uplands. Biodiversity levels have varied considerably over 400 years, partly as a function of land management, suggesting that establishing baselines or “natural” target levels for biodiversity is likely to be problematic. Changes in livestock grazing pressures brought about by changes in prices had statistically significant effects on estimated plant diversity, as did land abandonment. This suggests that longterm management of upland areas for the conservation of diversity should focus on grazing pressures as a key policy attribute. Another policy implication is that drastic cuts in grazing pressures – such as might occur under current reforms of the Common Agricultural Policy - can have adverse biodiversity consequences.
Keywords
economic factors; grazing pressures; historical studies; interdisciplinary studies; panel data models; pollen analysis; uplands; palynological richness
JEL codes
- C50: Econometric Modeling: General
- N50: Economic History: Agriculture, Natural Resources, Environment, and Extractive Industries: General, International, or Comparative
- Q20: Renewable Resources and Conservation: General
Title of series | Stirling Economics Discussion Paper |
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Number in series | 2008-01 |
Publication date online | 01/01/2008 |
URL | http://hdl.handle.net/1893/531 |