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Definition of heathland in English: heathlandnounˈhiːθlandˈhiθˌlænd mass nounalso heathlandsAn extensive area of heath. Example sentencesExamples - This will be replaced by mixed open forest and heathland, helping integrate the moorland, which has special protection status, to the forest.
- A forest for them and their successors was an area of unenclosed countryside, consisting of a highly variable mixture of woodland, heathland, scrub and agricultural land.
- The pond is actually quite a large lake, fringed with extensive reedbeds and patches of willow scrub, surrounded by heathland and birch scrub.
- ‘You're so privileged to grow up in this area with all the walking trails, coastal heathlands and rainforests - while you're at school I challenge you to get to know all of your national parks,’ he said to the assembly.
- A mix of habitats, from mixed woods to heath and sand dunes, has been created, and conifers are being removed from another 72 acres to extend the area of heathland.
- The Fire brigade were called just before 11 pm and extinguished the fire, which burned an area of heathland around three-quarters of a mile square.
- What if the new wood is planted on an area of heathland?
- A search is underway for the owners of an area of Harray heathland, so that a 4,000 year old archaeological site can be opened to the public for the first time ever.
- It was an area of open heathland broken up by small clumps of trees, many misshapen and stunted by the constant attentions of wandering ponies.
- And it seems admirers have a treat in store this year on Girraween's alpine style heathlands, meadows and high altitude forests.
- The heathland as such on the Great Heath only dates to the post-Norman period, when centuries of nutrient depletion and a deteriorating climate led to its formation.
- Farmers and landowners planning to plough up or alter moor and heathland in the Peak District have been warned that they now need prior permission.
- It was Clumber House, a mansion built by the Duke of Newcastle in 1767 and set in 3,800 acres of woodland and heathland now owned by the National Trust.
- To prevent succession by trees, heathlands on the southern Massachusetts islands are managed by conservation organizations and state agencies mainly through controlled burning, mowing, or grazing.
- Avoid snake bites by avoiding areas such as heathland where they are more common.
- One section of the garden demonstrates a method developed by the conservation group English Nature to restore heathland, a landscape habitat that is rarer than rainforest and being lost at a rate of 15 percent a decade.
- It gives new rights to walk over private land that can be classed as mountain, moorland, heathland or down.
- In the heathlands, with such frequent fires, plants have evolved to germinate only following fires, because then they can take advantage of the pulse of nutrients deposited in the soil by ash.
- One was a species of Euphrasia, or eyebright, endemic to the peaty heathlands and mountains of the Port Davey area and never before described.
- This area of grazing marshes is now a nature reserve and includes woodland, marsh and heathland, and can be explored on marked trails.
Definition of heathland in US English: heathlandnounˈhiθˌlændˈhēTHˌland also heathlandsAn extensive area of heath. Example sentencesExamples - To prevent succession by trees, heathlands on the southern Massachusetts islands are managed by conservation organizations and state agencies mainly through controlled burning, mowing, or grazing.
- This area of grazing marshes is now a nature reserve and includes woodland, marsh and heathland, and can be explored on marked trails.
- A forest for them and their successors was an area of unenclosed countryside, consisting of a highly variable mixture of woodland, heathland, scrub and agricultural land.
- In the heathlands, with such frequent fires, plants have evolved to germinate only following fires, because then they can take advantage of the pulse of nutrients deposited in the soil by ash.
- One was a species of Euphrasia, or eyebright, endemic to the peaty heathlands and mountains of the Port Davey area and never before described.
- It was Clumber House, a mansion built by the Duke of Newcastle in 1767 and set in 3,800 acres of woodland and heathland now owned by the National Trust.
- Avoid snake bites by avoiding areas such as heathland where they are more common.
- This will be replaced by mixed open forest and heathland, helping integrate the moorland, which has special protection status, to the forest.
- It gives new rights to walk over private land that can be classed as mountain, moorland, heathland or down.
- ‘You're so privileged to grow up in this area with all the walking trails, coastal heathlands and rainforests - while you're at school I challenge you to get to know all of your national parks,’ he said to the assembly.
- A mix of habitats, from mixed woods to heath and sand dunes, has been created, and conifers are being removed from another 72 acres to extend the area of heathland.
- One section of the garden demonstrates a method developed by the conservation group English Nature to restore heathland, a landscape habitat that is rarer than rainforest and being lost at a rate of 15 percent a decade.
- The heathland as such on the Great Heath only dates to the post-Norman period, when centuries of nutrient depletion and a deteriorating climate led to its formation.
- What if the new wood is planted on an area of heathland?
- The pond is actually quite a large lake, fringed with extensive reedbeds and patches of willow scrub, surrounded by heathland and birch scrub.
- The Fire brigade were called just before 11 pm and extinguished the fire, which burned an area of heathland around three-quarters of a mile square.
- And it seems admirers have a treat in store this year on Girraween's alpine style heathlands, meadows and high altitude forests.
- It was an area of open heathland broken up by small clumps of trees, many misshapen and stunted by the constant attentions of wandering ponies.
- Farmers and landowners planning to plough up or alter moor and heathland in the Peak District have been warned that they now need prior permission.
- A search is underway for the owners of an area of Harray heathland, so that a 4,000 year old archaeological site can be opened to the public for the first time ever.
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