Supporting guidance for Retention of Winter Stubbles for Wildlife and Water Quality

Date published: 9 January, 2017

Note : In November 2023, the link to the Managing Arable for Farmland for Wildlife has been corrected including the amending of reference from Scottish Natural Heritage to NatureScot.

For recent changes to this guidance, please see the bottom of the page.

This option encourages farmers to keep stubbles unploughed until early spring. Only cereal or oil-seed crops are eligible. Legumes and similar protein crops are ineligible due to their nitrogen-fixing properties.

This option has a hectarage limit per holding, which is for the duration of the SRDP programme. Therefore, if you have already reached this limit in a previous AECS approved application, you cannot apply for this option in any subsequent application.

Over-wintered stubbles are a good way of reducing soil erosion risk and provide winter food and cover for farmland birds.

Research suggests that 10 to 20 per cent of arable land should be left as late-ploughed stubble. For example, the skylark population has been shown to decline if the proportion of overwintered stubble in the landscape drops below 10 per cent.

Stubbles have traditionally been one the most important sources of seed food for farmland birds over the winter. Spilt grain and weed seeds are vital for the winter survival of birds such as tree sparrows, corn bunting and yellowhammer.

Stubbles can also attract large flocks of finches and skylarks. Winter cropping has reduced the amount of stubble available and better weed control has reduced the number of seeds available within the remaining stubbles.

Retaining a proportion of arable land in late-ploughed stubbles will benefit farmland birds.

© Paul Chapman, SAC Consulting

Winter stubble – © Paul Chapman, SAC Consulting

Bare soils and winter crops are generally more prone to soil erosion than winter stubbles.

This is particularly the case on steeply sloping ground on erodible soils. Retaining winter stubbles is a good way of reducing the risk of soil run-off and protecting water quality.

If you are undertaking this option to address diffuse pollution risks, or to benefit fresh water pearl mussel, we will assess whether the option has been sited in an appropriate location.

  • all fields left in over-wintered stubble will benefit wildlife. Fields adjacent to tall hedges, wild bird crops and grass margins will provide a greater range of habitat and be especially attractive to farmland birds
  • where this option is used to benefit water quality, the focus should be on sloping fields with light soils because they are more vulnerable to erosion, particularly where watercourses are present
  • leave the field uncultivated until 1 March
  • barley stubbles (especially spring barley) tend to be better for birds than stubbles of other crops
  • the conservation value of the stubbles will be affected by the weed control you have carried out in the preceding crop. Where possible, the use of herbicides in the preceding growing season should be reduced, especially in fields with light soils and a low burden of undesirable weeds
  • the use of pre-harvest desiccants has been shown to reduce the value of stubbles to farmland birds in the following winter. This option is not eligible where desiccants are used

Further information can be found in Managing Arable Farmland for Wildlife (NatureScot).

Section Change
Introduction Inclusion of information regarding the hectarage limit for this option.

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