New research will support the potential for grasslands that are more resilient to climate extremes, hold carbon, provide pollen and support biodiversity while requiring less intensive agricultural methods.
New research will support the potential for grasslands that are more resilient to climate extremes, hold carbon, provide pollen and support biodiversity while requiring less intensive agricultural methods.
The grasslands of the future need to consist of nutritious grassland species that can persist without re-sowing and high levels of fertiliser and herbicide inputs, making them both more economically viable and resulting in reduced greenhouse gas emissions. Identifying relevant locally adapted species and developing appropriate propagation techniques are key to a successful shift towards such grasslands.
A year-long project involving DLF Seeds and the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (UKCEH) will help address this challenge. It will explore the scientific evidence on grassland composition using data from UKCEH’s Countryside Survey, to identify which species, with which properties, grow successfully in multi-species grasslands across lowland grazing areas of GB and specifically the north of Great Britain.
Read more at: UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
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