Skógræktarritið - 15.05.2001, Side 135

Skógræktarritið - 15.05.2001, Side 135
and Habitat Action Plans (part of the UK Biodiversity Action Plan) include costed and phased expansion targets for different native woodland types. In addi- tion, there is an increasing awareness that more benefits could be accrued from an expan- sion in native woodlands if a long-term strategic approach were adopted. This forms the basis of the philosophy of Forest Habitat Networks (FHN). Research undertaken by Scottish Natural Heritage (Peterken et al 1995) has demonstrated that the spatial distribution of new wood- land can have a major impact on its value for biodiversity and con- servation. Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH) has identified the re-estab- lishment and restoration of native woodland as one of the most important steps towards a sus- tainable future for the natural her- itage. This paper describes the development and application of a modeling tool which is providing SNH, and to a limited extent other groups, with assistance towards achieving this objective. METHODS Very little is known about the potential distribution and extent of different woodland types to guide native woodland expan- sion at regional and local levels. Most surviving native woodlands tend to be highly fragmented and are often radically altered. Com- parisons with historical recon- structions from palaeobotanical studies (Bennett, 1996) are likely to be of limited relevance since site conditions have been modi- fied by factors such as climate change and environmentai pollu- tion, the removal of the original forest cover, and agricultural cul- tivation of soils. A more realistic approach is to predict woodland distribution for current environmental condi- tions using site suitability mod- els. At MLURI a Native Woodland Model (NWM) is being devel- oped, with support from Scottish Natural Heritage, which links expert knowledge on woodland and scrub habitat requirements with digital biophysical data to predict the occurrence and distri- bution of a range of woodland communities. The woodland mapped broadly corresponds to 'present-natural', i.e. the native species inherited from primeval conditions, taking into account site and climatic changes to the present day. Data Two digital data sources are used in the model: the 1: 250 000 scale National soils map (MISR 1984) and the 1: 25 000 scale Land Cover of Scotland 1988 (LCS88) dataset (MLURI 1993). Both data sets contain a range of informa- tion relevant to the prediction of NVC woodland communities. The 1: 250 000 scale national soil map comprises 580 soil map units, differentiated on geological (soil assocation), pedological (compo- nent soils) and physiographic cri- teria (landforms). Each soil map unit also has a number of vegeta- tion communities ascribed to it, but this is not a criterion used to distinguish one soil map unit from another. The majority of the 580 soil map units are soil com- plexes particularly over much of the central, western and northern Highlands. i.e. they contain two or more soil types. Tfie 1:25 000 Land Cover map pro- vides information on land cover existing in 1988. It is the first ever national census of land cover in Scotland and was cap- tured from the visual interpreta- tion of aerial photographs. The hierarchical classification allows for 126 single land cover features including all the major semi-nat- ural vegetation communities. There are over 1000 mosaic cate- gories used largely to describe the heterogeneous semi-natural vegetation resource. in total, veg- etation mosaics rather than sin- gle categories cover approxi- mately 30% of Scotland. It pro- vides much more robust and detailed land cover information than the soil map. The two datasets were overlaid within a Geographic information System forming a new integrated dataset that contains several thousand soil/land cover combi- nations. These combinations, which are essentially a descrip- tion of the present site condi- tions, form the basis of the Native Woodland Model (NWM)’s predictions. Each combination is allocated to an NVC woodland type or to a mosaic of NVC types (see below), based on the rela- tionships between biophysical properties and woodland require- ments. It is important to note that the NWM predicts the poten- tial for woodland and scrub types under current soil and vegetation conditions, i.e. with no or mini- mal intervention. Modelling The National Megelalion Classification (NVC) has been used as the basis for most of the woodland cate- gories described, predicted and mapped in this project. Nineteen major UK woodland types and six scrub communities, each with a distinctive mix of trees, shrubs, field and ground flora, are described in the NVC (Rodwell 1991). The range of woodlands within the NVC are associated with different habitats which are described in terms of climatic zone, soil types, terrain and topographic position. These rela- tionships are described in vary- ing degree of complexity and SKÓGRÆKTARRITIÐ 2001 l.tbl. 133
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