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AHW4

Skylark plots

£11.00

plot · year

format_list_bulleted What to do

  • During the autumn and winter, create fallow plots within a winter cereal crop.
  • Ensure at least 2 plots per ha of winter cereal crop.
  • Plots should be at least 3m wide and around 16 square metres in area.
  • Retain the fallow plots until the winter cereal crop is harvested in the summer.
  • Do not locate the fallow plots in tramlines, boundaries or margins.

schedule When to do

  • Do this action each year of its 3-year duration.
  • If the start date is too late, establish the skylark plot within 12 months.
  • In the final year, do this action until the winter cereal crop is harvested or the action’s end date, whichever is earlier.

checklist How to do and evidence required

  • Written evidence that land is not at risk of soil erosion or surface runoff.
  • Field operations at a land parcel level and associated invoices.
  • Photographs or other documentation.

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info Additional Information

AHW4: Skylark plots - GOV.UK

Contents

  1. Duration
  2. How much you’ll be paid
  3. Action’s aim
  4. Where you can do this action
  5. Eligible land
  6. Eligibility of protected land
  7. Available area you can enter into this action
  8. Rotational or static action
  9. What to do
  10. When to do it
  11. How to do it
  12. Evidence to keep
  13. Other actions or options you can do on the same area as this action
  14. Advice to help you do this action
  15. Choosing the right location
  16. How to establish the plots
  17. Managing the plots

This is an action in the Sustainable Farming Incentive (SFI) scheme: expanded offer for 2024. You must read the SFI scheme information to understand the scheme rules and how to apply.

Duration

3 years

How much you’ll be paid

£11 per plot per year (minimum 2 plots per hectare (ha))

Action’s aim

This action’s aim is that there are fallow plots for nesting skylarks within a winter cereal crop, until the crop is harvested in the summer.

The purpose of this is to provide skylarks with suitable nesting habitats in winter cereal crops throughout their breeding season.

Where you can do this action

You can do this action on agricultural land located below the moorland line that’s:

  • identified by you as not being at risk of soil erosion or surface runoff – you must keep evidence of this
  • an eligible land type (as defined in section 5.1 ‘Eligible land types for SFI’ in the SFI scheme information)
  • registered with an eligible land cover on your digital maps
  • declared with a land use code which is compatible with the eligible land cover

You must not do this action on land that’s bounded by tree lines or adjacent to woods, unless the land parcel is larger than 10ha. This is because it increases the risks of predator attack.

Eligible land

  • Eligible land type: Arable land used to grow crops
  • Eligible land cover: Arable land
  • Compatible land use code: Land use codes for arable crops or leguminous and nitrogen-fixing crops
  • Eligible land type: Temporary grassland
  • Eligible land cover: Arable land
  • Compatible land use code: TG01
  • Eligible land type: Arable land lying fallow
  • Eligible land cover: Arable land
  • Compatible land use code: FA01

Eligibility of protected land

  • Protected land: Sites of special scientific interest (SSSIs)
  • Eligibility: Eligible – you must get SSSI consent before you do this action (read section 10.3 ‘SSSI consent’ in the SFI scheme information to find out how to do this)
  • Protected land: Historic and archaeological features
  • Eligibility: Eligible – you must get a SFI HEFER before you do this action (read section 5.6 ‘Land with historic or archaeological features’ in the SFI scheme information to find out how to do this)

Available area you can enter into this action

Not applicable – you’ll apply per plot (minimum 2 plots per ha).

Rotational or static action

This action is rotational or static. This means you can either:

  • move its location for the second and third years of this action’s duration
  • do it at the same location each year of this action’s duration

What to do

During the autumn and winter, you must create fallow plots within a winter cereal crop.

For each land parcel where you do this action, there must be at least 2 plots per ha of winter cereal crop you’re growing. For example, if you’re growing 5ha of winter cereal crop in a land parcel, there must be at least 10 plots.

You must make sure that the plots are large enough to meet this action’s aim. This will usually mean they need to be at least 3m wide and around 16 square metres in area.

You must retain the fallow plots until the winter cereal crop is harvested in the summer.

You must not locate the fallow plots in tramlines, boundaries or margins, as this increases risk of attacks on skylark nests by predators.

You can maintain an existing skylark plot to get paid for this action if it:

  • meets this action’s requirements
  • is not already being paid for under another environmental land management scheme option, such as Countryside Stewardship option AB4 (skylark plots)

When to do it

You must do this action each year of its 3-year duration.

If this action’s start date means it’s too late to establish the skylark plot, you must do this within 12 months of this action’s start date.

In the final year of this action’s duration, you must do this action until the winter cereal crop is harvested, or this action’s end date whichever is earlier.

How to do it

It’s up to you how you do this action, as long as you:

  • follow this action’s requirements – these are identified by a ‘must’
  • do the action in a way that could reasonably be expected to achieve this action’s aim

You may find it helpful to read the ‘advice to help you do this action’, but it’s not part of this action’s requirements.

Evidence to keep

You must keep written evidence that land entered into this action is not at risk of soil erosion or surface runoff. You can use the soil management plan produced for CSAM1 or SAM1 to identify this.

You must keep evidence to show what you’ve done to complete this action, such as:

  • field operations at a land parcel level and associated invoices
  • photographs or other documentation

If it’s not clear that you’ve done this action in a way that could reasonably be expected to achieve its aim, we may ask for this evidence. You must supply the evidence if we ask for it.

Other actions or options you can do on the same area as this action

You can do the following actions or options on the same area in a land parcel as this action.

Some actions or options can only be done on the same area if they’re done at a different time of year to this action. For example, winter cover followed by a summer companion crop. Read ‘What to do’ and ‘When to do it’ to find out when this action must be done.

Scheme Action or option codes
SFI 2024 actions CSAM1, CNUM1, CIPM1, OFM4, OFC3
SFI 2023 actions SAM1, IPM4, NUM1, IPM1
CS options HS3, HS9, OR3, OT3
ES options No ES revenue options
SFI pilot standards No area-based SFI pilot standards

If an action or option cannot be located on the same area, you may be able to do it on a different area in the same land parcel. Read section 6 ‘Eligible land in other funding schemes’ in the SFI scheme information for more details.

You can do the following actions or options on the eligible boundaries of a land parcel entered into this action:

  • SFI 2024 actions: CHRW1, CHRW2, CHRW3, BND1, BND2 and WBD2
  • SFI 2023 actions: HRW1, HRW2, HRW3
  • CS option BE3 (management of hedgerows)
  • the introductory level of the SFI pilot hedgerows standard

Advice to help you do this action

The following advice may help you to do this action, but it’s not part of this action’s requirements.

Choosing the right location

To help make sure there is easy landing and foraging access for skylarks, you can locate the plots:

  • in large, open winter cereal fields – this will usually be around at least 5ha (or at least around 10ha where fields are bordered by mature scrub, tall hedgerows, trees and woodland)
  • in field where skylarks are present or have nested in the past
  • on land with little or no spring cropping, where possible
  • between tramlines, away from telegraph poles and pylons (and at least around 80 metres from field edges)
  • close to complementary wildlife habitats that are insect and seed rich – such as, cultivated areas for arable plants, flower-rich margins, enhanced overwintered stubble and winter bird food

How to establish the plots

You can establish the skylark plots by either:

  • turning off the drill during sowing to leave an unsown plot
  • drilling the field and spraying the plot areas with a non-selective herbicide by the end of December

If you establish the plots by spraying, this can reduce foraging opportunities for the insects which skylarks forage for. This is because these areas will not have much vegetation for longer.

Managing the plots

After drilling, you can apply fertiliser and spray treatments to the skylark plots, as well as the adjacent crop. You do not need to keep the plots weed-free.

Birds, nests and eggs are protected by law. To avoid damage to skylark nests, avoid mechanically weeding the winter cereal crop between April and harvesting.

You can control weeds (such as black-grass and wild oat) by spot spraying using a hand-held device (such as a knapsack or hand lance) before they flower and set seed.

Published 21 May 2024 Last updated 15 August 2024 + show all updates

  1. 13 August 2024

CIPM4 removed from SFI 2024 actions.

  1. 2 August 2024

Where you can do this action - an eligible land type is defined in section 5.1 ‘Eligible land types for SFI’ in the SFI scheme information. Eligibility of protected land - updated link to section 10.3 ‘SSSI consent’ in the SFI scheme information. What to do - updated example – if you’re growing 5ha of winter cereal crop, there must be at least 10 plots. Published voluntary advice to help you do this action, but it's not part of this action’s requirements.

  1. 21 May 2024

First published.