Blogs
27/3/2020 in: Farmland Ecology Blog under: Farmland Ecology
A new paper from the GWCT’s Head of Farmland Ecology, Professor John Holland, has been published in the journal Insects, discussing Conservation Biological Control – a component of integrated pest management that allows more sustainable farming, using insects as natural predator control to reduce the reliance on expensive and potentially damaging pesticides.
7/8/2019 in: Farmland Ecology Blog under: Farmland Ecology
9/4/2019 in: Farmland Ecology Blog under: Farmland Ecology
3/5/2018 in: Farmland Ecology Blog under: Farmland Ecology , Farming
The EU has now extended the ban on the use of neonicotinoid insecticides to all field crops which includes cereals and sugar beet. John Holland looks at some alternatives.
7/2/2018 in: Farmland Ecology Blog under: Farmland Ecology , Farming
With New Zealand’s dairy farmers currently getting a lot of stick about their impact on the environment and especially water quality. John Holland asks who should pay for environmental protection?
19/1/2018 in: Farmland Ecology Blog under: Farmland Ecology
15/12/2017 in: Farmland Ecology Blog
I have been fortunate enough to be able to return to where I did my PhD almost 30 years ago.
27/10/2017 in: Farmland Ecology Blog under: Allerton Project , Farming , Farmland Ecology
A recent paper on insect declines on nature reserves in Germany attracted a surprising amount of media attention last week. But then bad news always gets the limelight. Should we be worried? And is it good for farmers to have fewer pesky creatures around?
21/9/2017 in: Farmland Ecology Blog under: Farmland Ecology
John Holland, Head of our Farmland Ecology Unit provides an update based on recent research.
2/8/2017 in: Farmland Ecology Blog under: Farmland Ecology
Over the last decade the research on pollinators, especially wild and honey bees has gone exponential, fuelled even more recently by the neonicotinoid issue. Similarly, there has been a huge push through agri-environment schemes, government initiatives and industry to promote the establishment of flower-rich habitats.
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