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heath |
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heath![]() Heathland on Chynalls Point, on the south Cornwall coast. The word ‘heath’ is derived from the plant, heather, that thrives best in the poor, acidic soil of land that has been cleared of trees, then grazed by animals to prevent the trees growing back. The area of heathland covering mainland Britain today is about 2,000,000 acres/8,094 sq km, or roughly a fifth of what existed at the end of the 17th century. Heather is frequently found growing together with spring-flowering yellow gorse. In botany, any of a group of woody, mostly evergreen shrubs, including heather, many of which have bell-shaped pendant flowers. They are native to Europe, Africa, and North America. (Common Old World genera Erica and Calluna, family Ericaceae.)
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In the Netherlands, for example, extreme reactive nitrogen levels have changed the Dutch countryside's characteristic heathlands to grasslands. Extremadura is the huge region of heathland and forest south-west of Madrid extending west to the border of Portugal and south to the Sierra Morena. European heathlands, long adapted to nitrogen-poor conditions, are giving way to Eurasian grasses under the fertilizing effects of nitrogen. |
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