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  1. Only showing results from data.jncc.gov.uk

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  2. data.jncc.gov.uk

    vegetation of Britain was reached. The National Vegetation Classification (NVC) has become widely accepted as an important tool for nature conservation as well as in various other spheres. Professor John Rodwell, who co-ordinated the NVC project and edited the five volumes of British Plant
    • field guide to mires and heaths

      vegetation. Various gaps in coverage of the NVC have been identified at community and sub-community level subsequent to the publication of British Plant Communities. These include several mire and heath types, as outlined in JNCC Report No. 302 Review of coverage of the National Vegetation Classification (Rodwell et al. 2000). No attempt

  3. data.jncc.gov.uk

    National Vegetation Classification Since its development in the 1980s, the NVC has become the standard classification used for describing vegetation in Britain. Whereas many other classifications are restricted to particular types of vegetation (e.g. the Stand Type classification which describes only woodland (Peterken
  4. data.jncc.gov.uk

    vegetation. Various gaps in coverage of the NVC have been identified at community and sub-community level subsequent to the publication of British Plant Communities. These include several mire and heath types, as outlined in JNCC Report No. 302 Review of coverage of the National Vegetation Classification (Rodwell et al. 2000). No attempt
  5. data.jncc.gov.uk

    British Plant Communities, use of the NVC and comparison with European phytosociological classification systems has revealed that there are types of British vegetation which have still to be described. As a result, the JNCC commissioned a review of the coverage of the NVC in 1998. This review has
  6. data.jncc.gov.uk

    The woodland section of the National Vegetation Classification (NVC) has been widely used by many people and organisations in Great Britain (and, to a limited extent, in Northern Ireland) since it became available in 1986. As a result, there is a great deal of information concerning the occurrence of woodland types in this country.
  7. data.jncc.gov.uk

    The National Vegetation Classification project was set up in 1975 by the Nature Conservancy Council to produce a classification of British semi-natural vegetation along phytosociological lines (Rodwell 1991). The classification was based in part on new survey work carried out in the mid to late seventies, but also used existing data where
  8. data.jncc.gov.uk

    A compilation of proposed additions and revisions to vegetation types in the National Vegetation Classification 5 7. Those set out by Prosser M. V. & Wallace H. L. 2003. Some maritime scrub noda from West Wales. In: Goldberg, E. (Ed) National Vegetation Classification -ten years' experience using the woodland section. JNCC Report No. 335 ...
  9. data.jncc.gov.uk

    UK Nature Conservation No 4: Summary of National Vegetation Classification woodland descriptions Keywords: JNCC, UK, nature conservation, summary, national vegetation classification, NVC, woodland, description, joint nature conservation committee, 1992 Created Date: 4/24/2013 9:24:51 AM
  10. data.jncc.gov.uk

    In terms of National Vegetation Classification (NVC) plant communities this habitat is characterised by W1 Salix cinerea - Galium palustre woodland, W2 Salix cinerea - Betula pubescens - Phragmites australis woodland, W3 Salix pentandra - Carex rostrata woodland, W4c Betula pubescens - Molinia caerulea woodland: Sphagnum sub-community, W5 Alnus
  11. data.jncc.gov.uk

    The main corresponding National Vegetation Classification (NVC) plant communities associated with this habitat type are W12 Fagus sylvatica-Mercurialis perennis woodland (base-rich soils), W14 Fagus sylvatica-Rubus fruticosus woodland (mesotrophic soils), W15
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