News from the RSPB site
The decision today to scrap a measure that has helped farmland birds across Europe will damn many species to further declines.
Numbers of skylarks, yellowhammers and linnets could plummet another five per cent now that the EU has abolished set-aside - a 19-year-old requirement for some fields on every arable farm to be left fallow.
Set-aside has been a boon for farmland birds whose populations have dropped by 40 per cent in the last 30 years.
Stone-curlews will be particularly at risk because many farmers have created nesting areas for them on set-aside.
Gareth Morgan, Head of Agriculture Policy at the RSPB, said: 'We're very disappointed with this decision particularly since nothing is being done to provide alternative benefits for wildlife.
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