2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.jeem.2008.03.005
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What drives long-run biodiversity change? New insights from combining economics, palaeoecology and environmental history

Abstract: This paper presents a new approach to understanding the effects of economic factors on biodiversity change over the long run. We illustrate this approach by studying the determinants of biodiversity change in upland Scotland from 1600-2000. The measure of biodiversity used is a proxy for plant species diversity, constructed using statistical analysis of paleoecological (pollen) data. We assemble a new data set of historical land use and prices over 11 sites during this 400 year period; this data set also inclu… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 29 publications
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“…Such a prediction is supported by more detailed ecological analyses, where species richness was higher on farms where cattle were grazing (Dallimer et al, ms;Evans et al, 2006). Land abandonment has been shown, historically, to lead on average to a loss of biodiversity in upland grazed systems (Hanley et al, 2008), so that any policy changes which increases abandonment will likely have adverse consequences for biodiversity.…”
Section: Ecological Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Such a prediction is supported by more detailed ecological analyses, where species richness was higher on farms where cattle were grazing (Dallimer et al, ms;Evans et al, 2006). Land abandonment has been shown, historically, to lead on average to a loss of biodiversity in upland grazed systems (Hanley et al, 2008), so that any policy changes which increases abandonment will likely have adverse consequences for biodiversity.…”
Section: Ecological Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…A long-term perspective can increase the evidence-base by providing information about the effects of many different forms of agriculture on upland biodiversity, not just modern mechanised, low labour-input farming. Hanley et al (2008Hanley et al ( , 2009 analysed the effects of changes in resource management and associated socio-economic factors on plant diversity in upland Scotland over the last 400 years using an approach that combined palynological Fig. (1).…”
Section: Case Study 4: Grazing Impacts and Histori-cal Context Of Biodimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Economists are also concerned with similar issues but have tended to concentrate on the design and implementation of conservation policies subject to resource constraints. Examples of different studies on this broader topic include harvesting (Clarks, 1973;Costello et al, 2008), habitat change (Polasky et al, 2004;Hanley et al, 2009), and the general problem of measuring biodiversity (Solow et al, 1993;Weitzman, 1992Weitzman, , 1998. Important related research includes studies on natural capital and sustainability (see Helm and Hepburn, 2014, for a recent survey).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%