Hi Tanit,
prescriptivism is not for me, but I can be prescriptive on demand!

Yes, in theory it should be fewer, but only if you really want to refer to "hectares", which is plural and countable. But as you know (hopefully you do know, lol), quantities followed by plural units of measurement are often considered as uncountable, taking account of the total amount and leaving aside the plurality of the units of measurement. Now, the problem is... I can't give you a good example, because I still have trouble with this too! Ok, I'll try:
About ten liters of water is needed for that chemical reaction. (Let's hope it is fine, LOL)
Another thing is that those two words together (="less than") have become a kind of fixed idiom that is usually used even if it refers to plural countable nouns.
There were less than one hundred people at the meeting.Using "fewer than" is prescriptively ok, but it doesn't sound great, so you will find "less than" instead, as a kind of idiomatic replacement, even in good writing.
I think I learned this from some style guide, maybe on bartleby.com, but I am not sure.
This is just my opinion though.