Western Daily Press

Two counties’ worth of UK grassland lost

- EMILY BEAMENT news@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

GRASSLAND covering an area as big as Somerset and Gloucester­shire combined has been lost to urban developmen­t and new woods across Britain in the past 25 years, satellite analysis shows.

The UK Centre of Ecology and Hydrology (UKCEH) has used highresolu­tion data from satellites to assess how land use has changed in Great Britain between 1990 and 2015.

It found there was an overall reduction in all types of grassland, both farm pasture and recreation­al use such as playing fields, with 7,668 square kilometres or 1.9 million acres lost in the quarter of a century analysed.

Gloucester­shire and Somerset combined are about 7,300 square kilometres.

At the same time there was an increase of 3,376 square kilometres, or more than 830,000 acres, in urban developmen­t – an area almost the size of Cornwall.

And an extra 5,236 square kilometres (1.3 million acres) was planted with woodland.

The analysis shows that grassland lost in England was mostly sacrificed to urban developmen­t, while in Scotland there was a huge expansion in woodland at the expense of grassland and arable fields.

Separate data from Forest Research shows the majority of Scotland’s woodland is conifer plantation­s. In Wales, the picture was more balanced, with a similar increase in urban and woodland cover.

Across Britain overall, an area of grassland around the size of Dorset (2,505 square kilometres) and arable farmland almost the size of Bedfordshi­re (1,121 square kilometres), were built on with houses, roads and other infrastruc­ture.

The biggest increase in urban sprawl was in Kent, which saw an increase of 136 square kilometres (33,600 acres) of built-up land from 1990 to 2015, followed by Essex (113 square km) and West Yorkshire (110 square km).

The data also shows 782 square kilometres (190,000 acres) of arable land for crops was lost over 25 years across Britain, mostly in Scotland.

In England, there was a significan­t reduction in land for farming crops in East Anglia, but increases in arable land elsewhere in the country.

Dr Clare Rowland of UKCEH, who led the analytical study, said: “Thanks to sophistica­ted data analysis of high-quality satellite images, we have been able to produce the most reliable picture to date of the changes across the British landscape in recent years.

“This informatio­n on how land cover in Great Britain has altered is crucial for understand­ing the impact of these changes on our environmen­t, and helping us plan for the next 25 years.”

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 ?? Peter Llewellyn ?? A green-winged orchid
in Wiltshire grassland
Peter Llewellyn A green-winged orchid in Wiltshire grassland

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