This report assesses the significance of British Lowland
Grasslands, occurring below the line of enclosure or moorland wall,
within a wider European frame. There are five such priority
habitats in the UK Biodiversity Action Plan and these are used as
the framework for the report: Lowland Calcareous Grassland,
Lowland Dry Acid Grassland, Lowland Meadows, Upland Hay Meadows and
Purple Moorgrass/Rush-pasture. The report also includes
Metallophyte Vegetation for which there is, as yet, no BAP
equivalent.

The report describes the character and occurrence of the
constituent plant communities of these habitats in terms of the
National Vegetation Classification, with a separate section
reviewing the situation for Northern Ireland. Using a
phytosociological approach, it then outlines the wider occurrence
of related vegetation types elsewhere in Europe, emphasising
similarities and contrasts to the UK and indicating the various
factors - climatic, edaphic, cultural or historical - that underlie
these patterns. The study focuses on the 25 European Union states
but, where relevant information is available for countries
bordering on the EU, this has been included.
All the Lowland Grasslands include priority Habitats Directive
habitats and the report describes how these have been defined in
the countries where equivalents of the Lowland Grasslands occur and
how well the habitats are covered within Natura 2000.
The report identifies gaps in coverage within the UK BAP,
highlighting the need for further survey of open ephemeral-rich
vegetation of Lowland Acid Grasslands and wetter Lowland
Meadows. There is also an inadequate understanding of the
full range of Metallophyte Vegetation and Serpentine swards.
Within Natura 2000, the UK definitions of which Lowland Grasslands
are included are somewhat narrower than in other EU member states,
particularly for the Lowland Acid Grasslands and drier Lowland
Meadows.
Important threats to Lowland Grasslands include continuing
eutrophication from agricultural improvement and atmospheric
deposition but neglect of management and abandonment are becoming
increasingly important. Failure to manage at landscape-scale
and in ways which accommodate dynamic ecological processes also
threaten the sustainability of these habitats. The report
also identifies some possible impacts of climate change.
Conservation initiatives in Lowland Grasslands are diverse but
unevenly spread across the full range of habitats and their
approaches and achievements are inadequately disseminated.
However, novel partnerships, community involvement and a local
focus are striking features of some projects. Research is
needed on the underlying environmental factors that influence the
distribution and occurrence of lowland grasslands, relationships
between biodiversity and productivity, the impacts of grazing,
species recruitment and assembly rules and dynamic processes
operating at landscape scale.
A European perspective will be vital to understanding and
sustaining these habitats and the report outlines ways in which the
UK could contribute to developing scientific networks and
partnerships for software development.
The report includes a full bibliography, including all web
sites referred to in the text. Appendices summarise the
sources and quality of distribution data for UK Lowland Grasslands
and list the Habitats Directive Interpretation Manuals used in the
report.