Bringing agriculture and biodiversity together

Partner RNPs: Haut-Jura, Massif des Bauges, Vercors

INRAE departments and units: ACT-Lessem

The “flower meadows” scheme emerged as part of a research programme involving INRAE and the Massif des Bauges Regional Nature Park. When the park’s charter was being revised, sociologists were called in to ensure that the interests of farmers producing Tome des Bauges, a PDO cheese emblematic of grassland farming, were taken into account. This involved reconciling the environmental measures of the “habitat-fauna-flora” directive with the economics of livestock farming.
Interdisciplinary research was carried out with the park’s stakeholders, and in 2005 it was decided to test the “flower meadows” agri-environmental measure. Initiated by German researchers, this measure assesses the ecological quality of agricultural meadows by means of a number of indicator plant species. A year later, the measure was incorporated into France’s rural development plan. The ecological and agricultural relevance of the scheme was tested in the Massif des Bauges, Haut-Jura and Vercors Regional Natural Parks as part of the MAE-R research project.
At the same time, the Massif des Bauges and Haut-Jura Regional Nature Parks launched the local “Prairies fleuries” (flower meadows) competition, the future “competition for agroecological practices”. Given its success, the Fédération des PNR turned it into a national competition in 2010, before it became part of the Concours Général Agricole in 2014. The national rollout of the competition is the brainchild of SCOPELA, a company set up as a result of collaboration between the Bauges Regional Nature Park’s agriculture officer and INRAE researchers. The latter designed the competition’s assessment method and common rules for local juries.

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