- Hedgerow removal
Hedgerow removal is part of the transition of
arable land from low-intensity to high-intensityfarming . The removal ofhedgerows gives larger fields making the sowing and harvesting of crops easier, faster and cheaper, and giving a larger area to grow the crops, increasing yield and profits.Hedgerows serve as important wildlife corridors, especially in the
United Kingdom where they link the country's fractured ancientwoodland . They also serve as a habitat forbird s and other animals. As the land within a few metres of hedges is difficult to plough, sow, or spray withherbicide s, the land around hedges also typically includes high plantbiodiversity . Hedges also serve to stabilise the soil and on slopes help prevent soil creep andleaching ofminerals and plant nutrients. Removal thus weakens the soil and leads to erosion.In the United Kingdom hedgerow removal has been occurring since
World War I as technology made intensive farming possible, and the increasing population demanded more food from the land. The trend has slowed down somewhat since the 1980s when cheap food imports reduced the demand on British farmland, and as theEuropean Union Common Agricultural Policy made environmental projects financially viable. Under reforms to national and EU agricultural policies the environmental impact of farming features more highly and in many places hedgerow conservation and replanting is taking place.In England and Wales agricultural hedgerow removal is controlled by the
Hedgerow Regulations 1997 , administered by thelocal authority .ee also
*
Hedge (barrier) External links
* [http://www.naturenet.net/trees/hedgerow/index.html About the Hedgerow Regulations 1997]
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