Abstract

The CORINE land cover maps present the longest series of land cover maps with a consistent class labelling system and date back to 1985. This paper presents the results of the CORINE land cover mapping of the United Kingdom for 2012 and the corresponding land cover change map from 2006 to 2012. It compares the rates of change with those of the preceding land cover change map 2000–2006 and finds that land cover change has become smaller in scale, more diverse in types of change and affects more land cover polygons than in the past reporting period. Land cover change from 2006 to 2012 affected almost 60% more land cover polygons than from 2000 to 2006. A greater variety of 165 types of land cover change was detected from 2006 to 2012 than the 67 types of change from 2000 to 2006. The total land cover change area increased by over 21,000 ha or 11% but remained at around 1% of the total land area of the UK. Rotation forestry mostly of conifer forests was a dominant type of land cover change in both periods (53% of overall change from 2000 to 2006 and 54% from 2006 to 2012), followed by growth and replanting of conifer forest. From 2006 to 2012 the replanting rate decreased by almost 15,000 ha compared to 2000–2006 and a smaller decrease in planting of broadleaf and mixed forests was also observed. Urban land take continued from 2006 to 2012 in the UK, with over 16,000 ha of increase in artificial surfaces. The rate of change from other land cover types to artificial surfaces accelerated from 2006 to 2012. However, we urge caution when interpreting the rate of land take, as it includes wind farms in forested areas which leave the forest largely intact apart from an access road and the wind turbine sites. We also found that the inference from the land cover change matrices is dependent on the level of class aggregation (level 1, 2 or 3).

Highlights

  • In 1985 the European Union initiated the CORINE land cover monitoring programme on 'Coordination of information on the environment'

  • We found that the inference from the land cover change matrices is dependent on the level of class aggregation

  • Significant revisions of the CORINE land cover map 2006 (1Spatial, 2007) were necessary because CORINE 2006 was generated from automated generalisation of Land Cover Map for 2007 (LCM2007) (Morton et al, 2011) and not by the same visual interpretation approach as used in CORINE 2012

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Summary

Introduction

In 1985 the European Union initiated the CORINE land cover monitoring programme on 'Coordination of information on the environment'. The CORINE land cover maps are available as cartographic products at a scale of 1:100,000 for most regions of Europe. CORINE is the longest available land cover and land cover change database with a consistent class labelling system. When a new CORINE land cover map is produced, a corresponding change map covering a time period of around 6 years is produced. A side effect of this difference in MMU is that the land cover change map is different from an overlay of the two land cover maps from time 1 and 2 (Feranec et al, 2007a). The reason for producing a separate land cover change map is to have a higher accuracy of the change statistics than would be achievable from a cross-tabulation of two land cover maps with 25 ha MMU

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