Abstract

Abstract The UK conurbation of Birmingham and the Black Country has recently been surveyed for a new Flora, on the basis of a 1 km square grid. The present paper uses the data to describe the ecological network of the conurbation. The total number of taxa per 1 km squares is shown to be moderately but significantly correlated, and the number of native taxa more strongly correlated, with the area of the previously-established network of protected sites. Nevertheless coincidence maps of total numbers or numbers of native species per 1 km square give only poor representations of the ecological network compared with maps of protected sites. Axiophytes are defined as plant species 90% restricted to conservation habitats and recorded in fewer than 25% of 2km × 2km squares in a county. Applying the concept to 1 km squares in Birmingham and the Black Country creates a list of 256 axiophytes. Numbers of axiophytes are shown to be more strongly correlated with areas of protected sites than total taxa or native taxa and a coincidence map of the axiophytes is found to provide a useful quantitative assessment of the ecological network. Maps of axiophytes are used to divide the network into core and linking areas and their use in consolidating and improving the botanical ecological network is explored.

Highlights

  • Nature conservation in the UK has traditionally been site-oriented

  • The present paper explores the characterisation of the 1 km × 1 km squares within a conurbation by the number of axiophytes they contain

  • The results obtained by mapping axiophytes show considerable agreement with maps showing the sites designated for their nature conservation value

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Summary

Introduction

Nature conservation in the UK has traditionally been site-oriented. It has its roots in the Society for the Promotion of Nature Reserves, founded in 1912. In 1949 the British government legislated to found the Nature Conservancy, mainly to create a system of national Nature Reserves and Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Responding to habitat fragmentation and the need for species distribution to respond to climate change, a focus on landscape scale nature conservation has started to develop. This concept had already developed a wide currency in various parts of the world (BENNETT & MULONGOY, 2006), ranging from proposals for a supra-national Pan-

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