Heaths are anthropogenic habitats found primarily in northern and western Europe, where they have been created by thousands of years of human clearance of natural forest vegetation by grazing and burning on mainly infertile acidic soils. They subdivide into two broad categories depending on climate, with true heathland developing in warm, dry conditions, and moorland developing in cooler, wetter conditions. As they have developed over a long period, a unique assemblage of plants and animals has adapted to thrive in these habitats. Until recently, modern techniques of agriculture threatened some of this habitat, by ploughing, fertilising and planting with arable crops, or in particular, conversion to commercial forestry plantations. In recent years their value has become much more appreciated and consequently, most Heathlands are protected. However they are also threatened by forest growth as a result of the discontinuation of traditional farming techniques such as grazing and burning that kept the cultural landscapes intact. Some are also threatened by urban sprawl.
Heathlands have a very typical associated bird fauna, notably Montagu's Harrier, Eurasian Hobby, European Nightjar, Wood Lark, Tree Pipit, European Stonechat and Dartford Warbler; where there are scattered trees, Green Woodpecker is also characteristic. Some reptiles are also largely confined to healthland, notably the Sand Lizard and the Smooth Snake, and one amphibian, the Natterjack Toad. It is also an excellent habitat for ants with many species being restricted entirely to it.
One of the biggest heathlands is the Lüneburger Heide in northern Germany. Other notable heaths include large parts of the New Forest and the Breckland in southern and eastern England respectively, and the Veluwe in the Netherlands, and smaller areas in Dorset, Devon and Surrey in southern England. Heathland habitats are also found in parts of Sweden, Denmark, France, Spain and along the Norwegian coastline.
Notable areas of upland moorland in Britain include Bodmin Moor, Dartmoor (see also Dartmoor wildlife), Exmoor, the Dark Peak, the North York Moors, the Forest of Bowland, the Lake District, the Pennines, Mid Wales, the Southern Uplands of Scotland, the Scottish Highlands and a very small pockets in the Shropshire Hills and western Herefordshire.
In more northerly latitudes, moorland is also found in lowland areas in the Scottish Highlands, Iceland and Norway; in the far north where trees do not grow naturally, moorland grades into natural tundra.
Hede | Heide (Landschaft) | Brezal | ヒース | Heide | Charneca | Hed
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