The use of soil data in natural heritage planning and management |
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Authors: | W. Towers A. J. Hester A. Malcolm D. Stone H. Gray |
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Affiliation: | Macaulay Land Use Research Institute, Craigiebuckler, Aberdeen AB15 8QH, UK;Scottish Natural Heritage, 27 Ardconnel Terrace, Inverness, UK;Scottish Natural Heritage, 2 Anderson Place, Edinburgh EH6 5NP, UK |
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Abstract: | Abstract. Native woodland restoration is a conservation priority within the UK and there is an increasing awareness that a long-term strategy is required to guide this process. A GIS-based modelling approach has been developed, which links site conditions as expressed in an integrated soil and land cover dataset with the site requirements for different woodland types. There are three important aspects to the model – the parameter weightings, the added value of the integrated dataset, and the woodland categories which are described and predicted. The initial quantitative and qualitative validation has been encouraging although more is required and planned. The results indicate that for broad strategic planning purposes, predictions of woodland potential are not improved significantly when climatic factors are incorporated. The concept that soil acts as an integrator of other environmental variables is discussed alongside the practical application of the model by a range of users. |
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Keywords: | Woodlands restoration models information systems soil UK |
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