Eleven years' data of grassland management in Germany.
Juliane VogtValentin H KlausSteffen BothCornelia FürstenauSonja GockelMartin M GossnerJohannes HeinzeAndreas HempNobert HölzelKirsten JungTill KleinebeckerRalf LauterbachKatrin LorenzenAndreas OstrowskiNiclas OttoDaniel PratiSwen RennerUta SchumacherSebastian SeiboldNadja SimonsIris SteitzMiriam TeuscherJan ThieleSandra WeithmannKonstans WellsKerstin WiesnerManfred AyasseNico BlüthgenMarkus FischerWolfgang W WeisserPublished in: Biodiversity data journal (2019)
Investigating the relationship between human land use and biodiversity is important to understand if and how humans affect it through the way they manage the land and to develop sustainable land use strategies. Quantifying land use (the 'X' in such graphs) can be difficult as humans manage land using a multitude of actions, all of which may affect biodiversity, yet most studies use rather simple measures of land use, for example, by creating land use categories such as conventional vs. organic agriculture. Here, we provide detailed data on grassland management to allow for detailed analyses and the development of land use theory. The raw data have already been used for > 100 papers on the effect of management on biodiversity (e.g. Manning et al. 2015).