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Briefing
The European Nature Information System (EUNIS), was conceived in the 1990s as a database containing information on European habitat types, species and protected areas. The EUNIS habitat classification emerged from this and is brought together with other interlinked modules on species and protected areas in the EUNIS web application, which is part of the European Biodiversity Data Centre hosted by the European Environment Agency (EEA).
EUNIS habitat classification is a pan-European, comprehensive and widely accepted classification of all habitat types. Since its creation, it had undergone only modest change, but the increasing need to support European policy on nature conservation with harmonised habitat descriptions, condition estimates and change assessments underpinned by field data led to the initiation of an extensive review of the EUNIS habitat classification in 2012. Forest habitats were the first to undergo revision. This briefing presents the review of EUNIS heathland, scrub and tundra classification. In parallel, EUNIS marine habitat types are revised following a different methodology.
Heathland, scrub and tundra are habitats that are widespread across Europe and are dominated by woody shrubs, often in combination with herbs and sometimes with mosses, liverworts and lichens. Tundra is characterised by the presence of permafrost. With the exception of situations where environmental conditions are extreme, most of these habitats represent temporary stages in the succession from grasslands to forests and are often dependent on grazing, burning or wood harvesting. The abundance and diversity of heath and scrub habitats is uneven across Europe. In the Mediterranean, Macaronesian and Atlantic regions, such habitats occupy a substantial part of the landscape, particularly in hills and mountains, and contribute to plant diversity with several narrowly distributed endemic species.
According to the European Red List of habitats, the percentage of European heathland scrub and tundra habitats under threat is relatively low. The main threats come from the abandonment of traditional management, infrastructure development and afforestation, while climatic warming poses a threat to Arctic and high mountain habitat types. Some heathland and scrub habitats are protected by EU legislation. According to reported data, about half of the EU protected heathland and scrub habitat types are assessed as having inadequate conservation status and approximately a quarter are assessed as having bad conservation status.
The EUNIS habitat classification has helped to harmonise descriptions of habitat types and to facilitate the collection of data across Europe through the use of criteria for habitat identification. In EUNIS, each European habitat type has a specific code and name, and is placed within a hierarchical structure that divides high level, broader types more finely at lower levels. For example, all land with heathland, scrub and tundra habitats is codified with the letter F in the current EUNIS habitat classification and is positioned at level 1. A sequence of habitat types from level 1 to level 3 is F: Heathland, scrub and tundra; F4: Temperate shrub heathland; F4.1: Wet heaths. The EUNIS habitat classification has evolved over time and full documentation of the EUNIS habitats was first provided in 2004 (Davies et. al., 2004). The current version of the EUNIS habitat classification from 2007 can be viewed at the EUNIS web application.
Independently from EUNIS, a bottom up classification of vegetation plot data on plant species composition was developed by plant ecologists from the early 20th century onwards. Vegetation plots (also known as relevés) are plots of varying size that are used as source data for vegetation classification and provide records of the composition of vegetation at a particular time and place (vegetation descriptions). Vegetation units are called ‘syntaxa’ and can be placed in a hierarchical system. The basic unit of this system is the ’association’. Associations can be grouped into larger ecological units called ’alliances’. Similar alliances may be grouped into ’orders’ and orders into vegetation ’classes’.
In parallel with EUNIS, the European Vegetation Survey — a working group of plant ecologists —developed the first overview of European vegetation units in 2002. A substantial revision led to the publication in 2016 of ’Vegetation of Europe’ (Mucina et al., 2016), the first comprehensive and critically revised classification of European vegetation types of vascular plants, bryophytes, lichens and algae. The European Vegetation Survey also developed the European Vegetation Archive (EVA), which is a centralised comprehensive database of the continuously increasing number of European vegetation plots from sources all over Europe.
The European Red List of habitats (Janssen et al., 2016) is based on the EUNIS habitat classification and was finalised in 2016. The Red List reviews the current status of all natural and semi-natural terrestrial, freshwater and marine habitats in the European Union and adjacent regions, and highlights the pressures they face. The Red List provides a fact sheet for every assessed European habitat type.
The revision of the terrestrial EUNIS habitat types could be obtained through alignment with the European Vegetation units via the complex processing of large vegetation data sets.
The first project to update the cross linkages between the vegetation units at the level of alliance and the EUNIS habitats at level 3 was carried out in 2012 (Schaminee et al., 2012). This prepared the ground for the next step; the underpinning of the EUNIS classification with in situ vegetation plot data from the EVA database. Forest habitats (EEA, 2015) were used to trial the methodology. The second group of habitat types — heathland, scrub and tundra (Schaminée et al., 2015; Schaminée et al., 2016) — was the subject of two EEA funded projects that were carried out between 2014 and 2016. The final proposed classification is a result of coordination and collaboration with the European Red List of habitats, which lead to a good alignment of habitat types between the two. Following public consultation of the proposals via the Eionet network, the final revised classification was concluded. This whole process of EUNIS maintenance and revision was supported by the European Topic Centre on Biological Diversity.
The EUNIS group for heathland, scrub and tundra (group F), as well as three coastal dune heaths and scrub were taken into account in the revision. The hedgerows and shrub plantation categories of group F were not dealt with at this point.
The revision was based on the 2007 version of EUNIS at level 3 and the 2013 version of the European Vegetation Check List, and submitted to the international Applied Vegetation Science journal, before final revision and publication in 2016. See Figure 1 for a simplified overview of the methodology used.
Note: The review steps are in green and final products are in orange. Formal definitions are both a product and a process. In the figure it is shown only as a product for simplicity.
Tailor made software (JUICE) was used to develop formal definitions of heathland, scrub and tundra habitat types based on the groups of vegetation plots assigned to each habitat type. Formal definitions consist of formulas that combine percentage coverages of species and species groups and apply habitat classification consistently across Europe.
The species composition of all vegetation plots was compared with the formal definitions in a procedure that included several checks and adjustments. Finally, the plots were assigned to individual habitats. Coastal habitat types were defined by intersecting the plots with a data set defined by the coastal dune area of the Map of the Natural Vegetation of Europe (Bohn and Neuhäusl, 2000).
Based on the groups of vegetation plots assigned to each habitat type and after removing the effect of geographically unbalanced sampling across Europe, three groups of indicator species were defined for each revised habitat: constant, diagnostic and dominant species.
The groups of vegetation plots assigned to each habitat were used for the production of distribution and suitability maps. Distribution maps simply show the distribution of the assigned vegetation plots. Suitability maps are based on modelling and indicate how suitable, in terms of climate and soil conditions, an area is for the habitat type concerned. Suitability maps were produced with Maxent software using 16 climate and soil layers. Modelling of each habitat followed two different approaches, assuming biased or non-biased data. The selection of the best modelling for each habitat type was based on the expert knowledge of the team members. The model has low prediction capacity in eastern Europe and Scandinavia due to a lack of data for those areas.
Probability maps, which are a further refinement of the suitability maps overlaid and intersected with a variety of land cover data and in some cases abiotic data, will become available at a later stage.
The final version of the EUNIS heathland, scrub and tundra habitat classification (Annex 1) was produced after the analysis and incorporation of comments received during the Eionet consultation. For each habitat type, the revision projects provided descriptions (Annex 2), lists of constant, diagnostic and dominant indicator species (Annex 3), a distribution map showing the location of the vegetation plots from the EVA database assigned to the EUNIS habitat type and a habitat suitability map (Annex 4).
Alpine and subalpineJuniperusscrub (F2.2b) emerged from the splitting of the current Evergreen alpine and subalpine heath and scrub (F2.2) habitat into three distinct types, on the basis of the presence of indicator species. In the final revised EUNIS classification, the code for the habitat type changed to S2-3.
The formal definition of the new habitat in the expert system is: <#TC Arctic-alpine-shrubby-junipers GR50> AND <#TC Arctic-alpine-shrubby-junipers GR #TC Shrubs EXCEPT #TC Arctic-alpine-shrubby-junipers>) NOT <#TC Trees GR05>
Based on the vegetation plots, a distribution map and a suitability map were produced for the habitat type (Map 1).
Bohn, U., and Neuhäusl, R., 2000, Map of the Natural Vegetation of Europe/Karte der Natürlichen Vegetation Europas,BfN-Schriftenvertrieb
(http://www.floraweb.de/vegetation/dnld_eurovegmap.html) assessed 19 May 2017
Davies, C. E., Moss, D. and Hill, M. O., 2004, EUNIS Habitat Classification Revised 2004, Report to European Environment Agency and European Topic Centre on Nature Protection and Biodiversity
(http://www.eea.europa.eu/themes/biodiversity/eunis/eunis-habitat-classification/documentation/eunis-2004-report.pdf) assessed 19 May 2017
Schaminee, J. H. J., Chytrý, M., Hennekens, S. M., Mucina, L., Rodwell, J. S. and Tichý, L., 2012, Development of vegetation syntaxa crosswalks to EUNIS habitat classification and related data sets,Final Report EEA/NSV/12/001
(https://forum.eionet.europa.eu/nrc-biodiversity-data-and-information/library/eunis_classification/crosswalks-eunis-eurovegchecklist-2012-1/eea-final-report-eunis-habitat-classification-vegetation-syntaxa) assessed 19 May 2017
EEA, 2015, Linking in situ vegetation data to the EUNIS habitat classification: results for forest habitats,EEA Technical report No 18/2015, European Environment Agency
(http://www.eea.europa.eu/publications/eunis-habitat-classification) assessed 19 May 2017
Schaminée, J. H. J., Chytrý, M., Hennekens, S. M., Janssen, J. A. M., Jiménez-Alfaro, B., Knollová, I., Mucina, L., Rodwell, J. S., Tichý, L. and data providers, 2015, Vegetation analysis and distribution maps for EUNIS habitats – Task 1 & 2, Report EEA/NSV/14/006, European Environment Agency
Schaminée J. H. J., Chytrý, M., Hennekens, S. M., Janssen, J. A. M., Jiménez-Alfaro, B., Knollová, I., Marcenò, C., Mucina, L., Rodwell, J. S., Tichý, L. and data providers, 2016, Review of grassland habitats and development of distribution maps of heathland, scrub and tundra habitats of EUNIS habitats classification. Report EEA/NSV/15/005, European Environment Agency
(https://forum.eionet.europa.eu/nrc-biodiversity-data-and-information/library/eunis_classification/report-2016-eunis-grasslands-review-and-heathland-scrub-tundra-maps) assessed 19 May 2017
Mucina, L., Bültmann, H., Dierßen, K., Theurillat, J-P., Raus, T., Čarni, A., Šumberová, K., Willner, W., Dengler, J., Gavilán García, R., Chytrý, M., Hájek, M., Di Pietro, R., Iakushenko, D., Pallas, J., Daniëls, F. J. A., Bergmeier, E., Santos Guerra, A., Ermakov, N., Valachovič, M., Schaminée, J. H. J., Lysenko, T., Didukh, Y. P., Pignatti, S., Rodwell, J. S., Capelo, J., Weber, H. E., Solomeshch, A., Dimopoulos, P., Aguiar, C., Hennekens S. M. and Tichý, L., 2016, ‘Vegetation of Europe: Hierarchical floristic classification system of vascular plant, bryophyte, lichen, and algal communities’,Applied Vegetation Science, (Volume 19, Issue Supplement S1), 1–264
(http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/avsc.2016.19.issue-S1/issuetoc) assessed 19 May 2017
Janssen, J. A. M., Rodwell, J. S., García Criado, M., Gubbay, S., Haynes, T., Nieto, A., Sanders, N., Landucci, F., Loidi, J., Ssymank, A., Tahvanainen, T., Valderrabano, M., Acosta, A., Aronsson, M., Arts, G., Attorre, F., Bergmeier, E., Bijlsma, R.-J., Bioret, F., Biţă-Nicolae, C., Biurrun, I., Calix, M., Capelo, J., Čarni, A., Chytrý, M., Dengler, J., Dimopoulos, P., Essl, F., Gardfjell, H., Gigante, D., Giusso del Galdo, G., Hájek, M., Jansen, F., Jansen, J., Kapfer, J., Mickolajczak, A., Molina, J. A., Molnár, Z., Paternoster, D., Piernik, A., Poulin, B., Renaux, B., Schaminée, J. H. J., Šumberová, K., Toivonen, H., Tonteri, T., Tsiripidis, I., Tzonev R., Valachovič M. and contributors, 2016,European Red list of Habitats. Part 2. Terrestrial and freshwater habitats. Luxembourg Publications Office of the European Union, Luxemburg
(http://ec.europa.eu/environment/nature/knowledge/pdf/terrestrial_EU_red_list_report.pdf) assessed 19 May 2017
Briefing no. 02/2017
Title: Underpinning European policy on nature conservation - The EUNIS revision
PDF TH-AM-17-002-EN-N - ISBN 978-92-9213-855-4 - ISSN 2467-3196 - doi:10.2800/03874
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For references, please go to https://eea.europa.eu./publications/underpinning-european-policy-on-nature-conservation/underpinning-european-policy-on-nature-conservation-1 or scan the QR code.
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