12 research outputs found
Influence of fire history and soil properties on plant species richness and functional diversity in a neotropical savanna
Development of vegetation on set-aside land for up to nine years from a national perspective
Ground beetles (Coleoptera, Carabidae) as indicators of change and pattern in the agroecosystem: Longer surveys improve understanding
Crop sequence, crop protection and fertility management effects on weed cover in an organic/conventional farm management trial
The contribution of English agri-environment schemes to botanical diversity in arable field margins
Crop cover the principal influence on non-crop ground beetle (Coleoptera, Carabidae) activity and assemblages at the farm scale in a long-term assessment
The UK Environmental Change Network: Emerging trends in the composition of plant and animal communities and the physical environment
This review identifies the major trends in physical, chemical and biological data between 1993 and 2007
at the 12 terrestrial sites in the United Kingdom Environmental Change Network (ECN) and assesses the
effectiveness of the programme.
Temperature and precipitation increased and sulphur (S) deposition decreased across the network.
There were also significant local trends in nitrogen (N) deposition. The decreasing S deposition was associated
with increasing pH of rainfall and soils and there was widespread evidence of soil pH showing
recovery from acidification.
Warm-adapted butterfly species tended to increase at northern, upland sites, consistent with an effect
of increasing temperatures. In contrast, carabid beetle species associated with cooler northern and
upland areas showed declining populations. The increasing trend in precipitation may account for a
decline in ruderal plant species in the lowlands, reversing an increase associated with drought in the
early part of the time series.
There was no general shift in the composition of plant communities which might reflect rising soil pH.
This may reflect the slow dynamics of plant community processes or a distinction between pH trends at
the surface and lower soil horizons.
The ECN is effective in detecting trends in a range of different variables at contrasting sites. Its strength
is the ability to monitor causes and consequences of environmental change in the same programme,
improving the ability to attribute causes of change, which is essential to developing conservation policy
and management in the 21st century
