What do we need to know to enhance the environmental sustainability of agricultural production? A prioritisation of knowledge needs for the UK food system
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Bardgett, Richard D.
Bell, Jenny
Benton, Tim G.
Booth, Angela
Bouwman, Jan
Brown, Chris
Bruce, Ann
Burgess, Paul J.
Butler, Simon J.
Crute, Ian
Dixon, Frances
Drummond, Caroline
Freckleton, Robert P.
Gill, Maggie
Graham, Andrea
Hails, Rosie S.
Hallett, James
Hart, Beth
Hillier, Jon G.
Holland, John M.
Huxley, Jonathan N.
Ingram, John S. I.
King, Vanessa
MacMillan, Tom
McGonigle, Daniel F.
McQuaid, Carmel
Nevard, Tim
Norman, Steve
Norris, Ken
Pazderka, Catherine
Poonaji, Inder
Quinn, Claire Helen
Ramsden, S. J.
Sinclair, Duncan
Siriwardena, Gavin M.
Vickery, Juliet A.
Whitmore, A. P.
Wolmer, William
Sutherland, William J.
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Abstract
Abstract: Increasing concerns about global environmental change and food security have focused attention on the need for environmentally sustainable agriculture. This is agriculture that makes efficient use of natural resources and does not degrade the environmental systems that underpin it, or deplete natural capital stocks. We convened a group of 29 ‘practitioners' and 17 environmental scientists with direct involvement or expertise in the environmental sustainability of agriculture. The practitioners included representatives from UK industry, non-government organizations and government agencies. We collaboratively developed a long list of 264 knowledge needs to help enhance the environmental sustainability of agriculture within the UK or for the UK market. We refined and selected the most important knowledge needs through a three-stage process of voting, discussion and scoring. Scientists and practitioners identified similar priorities. We present the 26 highest priority knowledge needs. Many of them demand integration of knowledge from different disciplines to inform policy and practice. The top five are about sustainability of livestock feed, trade-offs between ecosystem services at farm or landscape scale, phosphorus recycling and metrics to measure sustainability. The outcomes will be used to guide ongoing knowledge exchange work, future science policy and funding.