Abstract

Abstract. Since 1978, a series of national surveys (Countryside Survey, CS) have been carried out by the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (CEH) (formerly the Institute of Terrestrial Ecology, ITE) to gather data on the natural environment in Great Britain (GB). As the sampling framework for these surveys is not optimised to yield data on rarer or more localised habitats, a survey was commissioned by the then Department of the Environment (DOE, now the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, DEFRA) in the 1990s to carry out additional survey work in English landscapes which contained semi-natural habitats that were perceived to be under threat, or which represented areas of concern to the ministry. The landscapes were lowland heath, chalk and limestone (calcareous) grasslands, coasts and uplands. The information recorded allowed an assessment of the extent and quality of a range of habitats defined during the project, which can now be translated into standard UK broad and priority habitat classes. The survey, known as the "Key Habitat Survey", followed a design which was a series of gridded, stratified, randomly selected 1 km squares taken as representative of each of the four landscape types in England, determined from statistical land classification and geological data ("spatial masks"). The definitions of the landscapes are given in the descriptions of the spatial masks, along with definitions of the surveyed habitats. A total of 213 of the 1 km2 square sample sites were surveyed in the summers of 1992 and 1993, with information being collected on vegetation species, land cover, landscape features and land use, applying standardised repeatable methods. The database contributes additional information and value to the long-term monitoring data gathered by the Countryside Survey and provides a valuable baseline against which future ecological changes may be compared, offering the potential for a repeat survey. The data were analysed and described in a series of contract reports and are summarised in the present paper, showing for example that valuable habitats were restricted in all landscapes, with the majority located within protected areas of countryside according to different UK designations. The dataset provides major potential for analyses, beyond those already published, for example in relation to climate change, agri-environment policies and land management. Precise locations of the plots are restricted, largely for reasons of landowner confidentiality. However, the representative nature of the dataset makes it highly valuable for evaluating the status of ecological elements within the associated landscapes surveyed. Both land cover data and vegetation plot data were collected during the surveys in 1992 and 1993 and are available via the following DOI: https://doi.org/10.5285/7aefe6aa-0760-4b6d-9473-fad8b960abd4. The spatial masks are also available from https://doi.org/10.5285/dc583be3-3649-4df6-b67e-b0f40b4ec895.

Highlights

  • In Great Britain (GB), monitoring of ecological and land cover change has been carried out since 1978 via a programme named Countryside Survey (CS)

  • An important point is that the data from the Key Habitat Survey cover a range of the less common land cover and habitat types and offer an additional element to the long-term national monitoring programme of the Countryside Survey, both by providing additional data to augment the wealth of long-term ecological data already collected by the programme and by offering an additional targeted sampling framework, which could be incorporated into the Countryside Survey field survey should resources become available

  • In Britain, there are a range of examples of studies carried out in the last 50 years regarding the ecologically valuable landscapes covered by the Key Habitat Survey (Dargie, 1993, 1995; Radley and Dargie, 1994; Sneddon et al, 1994; Stevens et al, 2007)

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Summary

Introduction

In Great Britain (GB), monitoring of ecological and land cover change has been carried out since 1978 via a programme named Countryside Survey (CS) (www. countrysidesurvey.org.uk, last access: 9 May 2018). Named as the “Key Habitat Survey” by ITE, the survey recorded vegetation species, land cover, landscape features and land use information from 1 km sample square sites occurring within the landscape types included as targets for conservation action in the original Countryside Stewardship Scheme (CSS) (Countryside Stewardship, 2017), an English grant scheme intended to reward farmers for farming land for nature conservation. An important point is that the data from the Key Habitat Survey cover a range of the less common land cover and habitat types and offer an additional element to the long-term national monitoring programme of the Countryside Survey, both by providing additional data to augment the wealth of long-term ecological data already collected by the programme and by offering an additional targeted sampling framework, which could be incorporated into the Countryside Survey field survey should resources become available. It is timely that these data are being made available for wider use

The survey in context
Landscape types
Lowland heath landscapes
Calcareous landscapes
Coastal landscapes
Upland landscapes
Survey design: 1 km square site selection and stratification
Defining the lowland heath mask
Defining the calcareous grassland mask
Defining the coastal mask
Defining the upland mask
Data collected
Land cover data: areas
Land cover data: boundaries
Vegetation data
X plots
Y plots 4 m2
Spatial landscape masks
Field survey data
Plot relocations
Analysis to date: key findings
Summary of results in terms of broad habitat extents
Summary of boundary results
Summary of vegetation plot results
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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