4.7 Review

The Interactions between Some Free-Ranging Animals and Agriculture-A Review

Journal

AGRICULTURE-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agriculture12050628

Keywords

crops; farm; natural environment; pests; wildlife damage

Categories

Funding

  1. Wroclaw University of Environmental and Life Sciences

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When humans began interfering with the environment to produce food, some free-ranging animal species adapted to live on typical farmland, sometimes choosing it as their main habitat. They use it on the basis of symbiosis or as a pest. This study aims to review and propose solutions to reconcile agriculture and wildlife, using Poland as an example. The two major problems observed are the negative impact of agriculture on certain species and the wildlife damage primarily caused by wild boars and Cervidae. Strict control and limitation of the wild boar population are crucial for agricultural economy, while the farmer's approach to cultivation and the environment are important for wildlife conservation.
When humans began interfering with the environment to produce food, some free-ranging animal species adapted to live on typical farmland, sometimes choosing it as their main habitat. They use it on the basis of symbiosis or as a pest. The animals affect farms in different ways, and the same concerns farms affecting animals. There are negative, from a human perspective, as well as positive aspects of this interaction. The aim of this study was to review and propose the solutions to reconcile these two factors, agriculture and wildlife, using Poland as an example. Two major problems were observed: the negative impact of agriculture on the occurrence or abundance of certain species, and wildlife damage caused mainly by wild boars (Sus scrofa) and Cervidae. The most important issue for agricultural economy is the strict control and limitation of the wild boar population, while the farmer's approach to cultivation and the environment are important for the wildlife. For years, man has been undertaking various activities using and subordinating elements of the environment, and each even small interference in the system that creates a harmony will have far-reaching consequences.

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