Abstract

It is well documented that significant losses in semi-natural grassland occurred across Europe during the second half of the twentieth century. However, comparatively few studies have investigated and quantified the fate of large numbers of individual grassland areas. This is important for understanding the causes of decline, and consequently establishing new policies to conserve and restore lost habitats. This study addresses this problem; GIS was used to compare historic survey data collected between 1960 and 1981 with two contemporary spatial datasets of habitats in England. The datasets included the Priority Habitats Inventory 2013 and the Land Cover Map 2007 and this was undertaken for different types of semi-natural grassland across England. Considerable decreases occurred across the different grassland types, with a loss of 47% of studied semi-natural grasslands sites in England over 32–53 years. Of this, the majority of grassland was lost to conversion to agriculturally-improved grassland or arable cultivation, 45% and 43% respectively. Changes to woodland and urban areas were also evident, but on a much smaller scale. Sites receiving statutory protection as a Site of Special Scientific Interest were found to have retained more grassland (91%), compared with non-protected sites (27%), thus highlighting the effectiveness of this aspect of current conservation policy in England, and the need for this to continue in the future.

Highlights

  • Semi-natural unimproved grasslands are sites of considerable conservation importance, both in the UK and Europe

  • Of the 848 semi-natural grassland sites studied in England, 47% were no longer their original semi-natural grassland type by 2013 (Fig. 3)

  • There were a small proportion of sites which had changed to a different habitat in the priority habitats inventory—mostly deciduous woodland or good-quality semi-improved grassland

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Summary

Introduction

Semi-natural unimproved grasslands are sites of considerable conservation importance, both in the UK and Europe. Grasslands in the UK are considered early-successional habitats that would rapidly turn into scrub and woodland without human-mediate grazing and cutting management. They are referred to as semi-natural habitat (Duffey, 1974; Poschlod and WallisDeVries, 2002). Unimproved grasslands are those created from low-intensity, traditional land management, that have not been subject to agricultural improvement through the use of artificial fertilisers and/or re-sowing (Bullock, 2011)

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