Applied ecology: from science to conservation policy and practice
Submitting Institution
University of GloucestershireUnit of Assessment
Geography, Environmental Studies and ArchaeologySummary Impact Type
EnvironmentalResearch Subject Area(s)
Environmental Sciences: Ecological Applications, Environmental Science and Management
Biological Sciences: Genetics
Summary of the impact
    Dr Anne Goodenough and Professor Frank Chambers undertake applied
      ecological research with
      importance for conservation and management, nationally and
      internationally. Working with, or
      commissioned by, major national bodies including The Heather Trust,
      Natural England,
      Countryside Council for Wales, British Trust for Ornithology and RSPB,
      their research on rare
      species and habitats influences major national policy (e.g. species
      conservation priorities, and
      degraded habitat restoration and conservation). Furthermore, their
      research informs evidence-based
      changes in management for species (leading to conservation of
      internationally declining
      songbird, the pied flycatcher, at key sites throughout the UK) and
      landscapes (blanket bog and
      heather moorland restoration in Wales and England).
    Underpinning research
    Species population decline and habitat degradation often have multiple
      interacting causes.
      Disentangling these is vital to understand mechanisms for change and to
      inform effective
      conservation. Innovative scientific research, as undertaken here using
      ecological and
      palaeoecological methods, has direct applications for both policy and
      practice. The underpinning
      research undertaken by Dr Goodenough (2008-date) and Professor Chambers
      (1999-date) was
      published in international peer-reviewed journals and reports of statutory
      conservation agencies.
    (a) Species decline and conservation. The pied flycatcher (Ficedula
        hypoleuca), which breeds
      in UK woodland and winters in Africa, is one of many internationally
      migratory woodland birds
      declining throughout Europe. Quantifying decline, and understanding the
      multiple causes
      thereof, is a vital first step in formulating effective policy and
      management. Goodenough et al.
      (2009) were the first to quantify a decline of more than 25% (the
      threshold for listing as a
      species of conservation concern) in a study part-funded by the British
      Trust for Ornithology.
      Using hierarchical modelling, this determined that a key factor was
      decreased reproductive
      success (in UK) and that other factors acted abroad. As flycatchers
      throughout Europe depend
      on nestboxes for breeding, and reproductive success was decreasing,
      follow-on research
      (Goodenough et al., 2008; part-funded by the RSPB) examined the
      effects of nestbox
      orientation on breeding success. This found orienting boxes south-west
      (180°-270°) reduced
      breeding success by 24% and lower occupation by other birds used as key
      bio-indicators of
      ecosystem health (e.g. great tits, Parus major). In an innovative
      interdisciplinary study
      combining field ornithology with microbiology, Goodenough and Stallwood
      (2012) showed that
      south-west nestboxes had a 40% increase in microbial load, more pathogens,
      and smaller,
      weaker, offspring. Abundance of one allergenic fungus, Epicoccum
        purpurascens, explained
      20% of variation in offspring quality and was much more abundant in
      south-west boxes, owing
      to microclimate (south-west boxes being warmer and wetter). Research led
      to placement of
      350 additional nestboxes at a top-5 UK site.
    (b) Conservation and restoration of degraded landscapes.
      Collaborative research with the
      Heather Trust (Chambers et al., 1999) applied palaeoecological
      methods innovatively to
      investigate recent upland spread of Molinia (purple moor grass—an
      invasive native species)
      and showed how such methods gave a much wider perspective on contemporary
      conservation
      concerns, such as loss of heather moorland. The work showed that, contrary
      to belief, the
      heather moorland had previously alternated over recent centuries between
      grass (though not
      Molinia) and heather dominance. The innovation led to contract
      research from statutory
      agencies Countryside Council for Wales (now Natural Resources Wales;
      jointly published in
      Chambers et al., 2007; 2013) and English Nature (now Natural
      England) to investigate
      centennial vegetation changes in degraded moorland and blanket mire as an
      aid to
      conservation management. The data showed principal vegetation changes
      post-dated the start
      of the Industrial Revolution, and that there were multiple causes of
      degradation and Molinia
      spread. This commissioned research pioneered the use of palaeoecology
      directly by
      conservation agencies, helped `Bridge the Gap' between long-term (i.e.,
      palaeo-) ecological
      data and conservation practitioners, legitimised national funding for bog
      and moorland
      restoration and led to new sponsored investigations of recent moorland
      palaeoecology to
      inform conservation practice.
    References to the research
    The case study is underpinned by the following peer-reviewed
      publications. Impact factors derived
      from journal homepages; citations from Google.
    
1. Goodenough, A.E., Elliot, S.L., Hart, A.G. (2009) The
      challenges of conservation for
      declining migrants: are reserve based initiatives during the breeding
      season appropriate for
      the Pied Flycatcher? Ibis, 151, 429-- 439. [Journal Impact Factor
      2.43, cited =9 + one book
      and one policy document]
     
2. Goodenough, A.E., Maitland, D.P., Hart, A.G., Elliot, S.L.
      (2008) Nestbox orientation: a
      species-specific influence on occupation and breeding success in woodland
      passerines.
      Bird Study. 55, 222-232 [Journal Impact Factor 0.868, cited =8 +
      one book aimed at
      conservation practitioners]
     
3. Goodenough, A.E., Stallwood B. (2012) Differences in
      culturable microbial communities in
      bird nestboxes according to orientation and influences on offspring
      quality in great tits
      Parus major. Microbial Ecology, 63, 986-995. [Journal
      Impact Factor 2.91; cited =1]
     
4. Chambers, F.M., Mauquoy, D. and Todd, P.A. (1999) Recent rise
      to dominance of Molinia
        caerulea in Environmentally Sensitive Areas: new perspectives from
      palaeoecological data.
      Journal of Applied Ecology, 26, 719-733. [Journal Impact Factor
      4.74; cited =50]
     
5. Chambers, F.M., Mauquoy, D., Gent, A., Pearson, F., Daniell,
      J.R.G. and Jones, P.S. (2007)
      Palaeoecology of degraded blanket mire in South Wales: data to inform
      conservation
      management. Biological Conservation, 137, 197-209. [Journal Impact
      Factor 3.794; cited
      =16]
     
6. Chambers, F.M., Cloutman, E.W., Daniell, J.R.G., Mauquoy, D.
      and Jones, P.S. (2013)
      Long-term palaeoecological study (palaeoecology) to chronicle habitat
      degradation and
      inform conservation ecology: an exemplar from the Brecon Beacons, South
      Wales.
      Biodiversity and Conservation, 22, 719-736. [Journal Impact Factor
      2.264; cited =2]
     
Details of contract research
    Countryside Council for Wales, contract science report no. 420: Recent
        Vegetational Change in
        Welsh Blanket Bogs: a palaeoecological appraisal.
    English Nature, contract VT014: A Preliminary Examination of the
        Vegetation History of
        Moorland in Northern England.
    Details of the impact
    [Superscripts are References to sources in Section 5]
    Changing policy: Meeting a need (identified by RSPB and British
      Trust for Ornithology) for research into
      population declines in woodland migratory songbirds, Goodenough et al.
      (2009) examined data from the
      RSPB-managed Nagshead Nature Reserve, a nationally important site for pied
      flycatcher.
    Species-specific research was a strategic priority at this site
      (2001-2004 & 2004-2008 Reserve
      Management Plans) and throughout the UK [1, 2]. This research
      showed substantial decline in flycatcher
      numbers, providing important detail for the species profile created by BTO
      and Joint Nature
      Conservation Committee (cited: http://www.bto.org/birdtrends2010/wcrpiefl.shtml),
      which informs
      national policy (Biodiversity Action Plans). This in-depth work informed
      additional research (by
      BTO) on the geographical extent of the decline and was instrumental in
      pied flycatcher being listed
      as of conservation concern throughout the UK [1].
    Changing practice: Researching the multiple causes of decline,
      especially those relating to
      breeding success, was an acknowledged RSPB priority, which Goodenough et
        al. (2008) and
      Goodenough & Stallwood (2010) addressed. The finding that nestbox
      orientation affects breeding
      success (Goodenough et al. 2008), probably related to directional
      differences in nestbox microbial
      load (Goodenough & Stallwood, 2012), changed RSPB management practice
      [2]. At Nagshead,
      new guidelines mean nestboxes are oriented away from south-west, improving
      breeding success
      by pied flycatchers by c. 20%. This change is critically important
      to ensure effective conservation
      and buffering decline at a nationally important site for an
      internationally declining species. This
      good practice has been shared with other RSPB sites with nestbox schemes
      that support pied
      flycatchers (e.g. Gwenffrwd-Dinas in mid-Wales) [2].
    Wider impact: Dissemination of these research findings by Dr
      Goodenough to Gwent Wildlife
      Trust staff and volunteers at an annual training event (March 2011)
      attended by more than 50
      people, led to altered nestbox placement policy for 28 woodland-based
      nestbox schemes
      (involving ~800 nestboxes) throughout S. Wales [3]. This
      benefits the entire small songbird
      community, including Redstart—another declining bird of conservation
      concern—by increasing
      breeding success and allowing population growth. The project is among the
      top five in the UK [3].
      Internationally, the findings concerning nestbox orientation were cited in
      an International Avian
      Conservation manual http://www.conservationevidence.com/actions/498
      —part 58).
    Habitat dynamics
    Chambers et al. (1999) showed how palaeoecological methods could
      be used to test received
      opinion on loss of heather and spread of Molinia within moorland.
      Cited 50 times, academics
      elsewhere, conservation practitioners and agencies [4, 5]
      regard this research as evidence of the
      value of palaeoecology (long-term ecology) to palaeoecology, and
      legitimised practical attempts to
      control Molinia. This pioneering work led directly to contract
      research from statutory national
      conservation agencies in Wales (Contract Science Report 420, CCW [6])
      and England (Project
      Contract VT014, English Nature [5]) on blanket mire and
      moorland.The commissioned contract
      research demonstrated the utility of such methods for blanket mire
      (Chambers et al., 2007, 2013),
      which informed the treatment of priority habitats in the Welsh uplands [4,
        7], and led to the initial
      drafting by CCW of an EC-LIFE application [4].
    Prof Chambers contributed to the inaugural `Bridging the Gap' (BtG)
      symposium in Hull (designed
      to forge links with practising conservation agencies), and to subsequent
      BtG Newsletters; to an
      international symposium in Stirling involving palaeoecologists and
      conservation practitioners; and
      to a session on use of past history (palaeoecology) at a Peatlands
      Symposium (Durham)—which
      all prompted the Yorkshire Peat Partnership to sponsor a PhD student
      (under Prof. Chambers'
      supervision) to investigate the palaeoecology of sites they are restoring,
      to inform their
      conservation management [8].Cited by Davies and Bunting (2010)
      [9] as having major impact on a
      key question for UK conservation policy, his research led ultimately to a
      call for a review of the
      value of the utility of palaeoecology to conservation by Natural England,
      for which he was a prime
      consultee, influencing a subsequent tender invitation (2012). The
      academic/practitioner group
      dealing with biodiversity at the international PALAEO50 Conference
      (Oxford, Dec 2012) cited his
      2013 paper as informing three follow-up questions in the current top 50
      research questions in
      palaeoecology: those concerned with assessing "the extent of [past] human
      influence and [the use
      of palaeoecology to inform] the management of cultural landscapes" (Seddon
      et al., in press, line
      313)[10]. Chambers' research is regarded as having the greatest
      impact on upland policy in Wales
      of any commissioned by CCW during the past 17 years [4].
    These examples show how innovative uses of ecological and
      palaeoecological scientific research
      have been applied to species- and habitat-conservation by principal bodies
      and statutory
      conservation agencies. The findings influenced change in direction of
      policy and attitude, and led
      to changes in management and conservation of rare species and habitats.
    Sources to corroborate the impact 
    
      - Statement from British Trust for Ornithology explaining the importance
        of Dr Goodenough's
        work for informing policy and practice at a national level.
- RSPB testimony—details the need for Dr Goodenough's research, changes
        to practice made
        as a result, and the implications of these changes (joint letter from
        former/current RSPB
        Reserve Managers who, together, span the whole period of Dr Goodenough's
        research).
- Gwent Wildlife Trust (GWT) testimony on the importance of research,
        and training provided by
        Dr Goodenough based upon this research, on setting up optimal nestbox
        conservation
        schemes throughout South Wales (Letter from GWT Volunteer Officer).
- Testimony, Countryside Council for Wales (Natural Resources, Wales);
        details origin and
        nature of contract research conducted for CCW and significance of the
        impact of that
        research.
- Testimony from Natural England regarding origin and impact of contract
        research, Project
        Contract VT014, English Nature.
- (2001) Recent Vegetational Change in Welsh Blanket Bogs: a
          palaeoecological appraisal.
        CCW Contract Science Report no. 420, Countryside Council for Wales,
        Bangor.
- (2003) Jones, P.S. et al. Priority habitats of Wales: a Technical
          Guide. Countryside Council for
        Wales, Bangor. [Section 8.3 Blanket bogs; cited on p. 97].
- The University of Gloucestershire commissioned independent consultants
        (Innovation
        Partnerships Ltd) who produced a report that summarises, in respect of
        information from
        Yorkshire Wildlife Trust and the Yorkshire Peat Partnership, the impact
        of contracted and
        sponsored palaeoecological research by Prof. Chambers et al. in
        England.
- Davies, A.L. & Bunting, J. M. (2010) Applications of Palaeoecology
        in Conservation. The Open
          Ecology Journal, 3, 54-67. [Case study 2, addressing Q. 79]
- (in press, 2014) Seddon, A. et al. Looking forward through the
        past: identification of fifty
        research questions in palaeoecology. Journal of Ecology, in
        press [online version available].