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Data Download - Vegetation Data

Access accurate borders of existing vegetation for your area of interest. This guide explains how to download & view this data on your map.

Simla Rees-Moorlah avatar
Written by Simla Rees-Moorlah
Updated over 2 weeks ago

By incorporating vegetation boundaries from the Environment Agency, World Resources Institute, and Meta into your plans, you can integrate these important features into baseline habitat assessments, land management planning, and more.

How to use the tool:

Select New - Download Data

From the list of downloads, select Vegetation Data

Either select an existing plan or create a frame area to define your area

Add a plan name and click on Download Now.

You will receive an email from us to confirm the process is running and another to confirm the status

Once you have confirmation of a successful download, new plans will load in the left-hand panel. Please note you may need to refresh your browser for these to load.

For England the data comes from the Environment Agency's LIDAR derived Vegetation Object Model (VOM).

The LIDAR derived Vegetation Object Model (VOM) is a raster product produced as part of the Environment Agency’s “Keeping Rivers Cool” project. It is an attempt to identify riparian tree cover and the opportunities for tree planting to increase future shading of streams & rivers.
Land App converts this raster data into vector for vegetation >2.5m tall.

Note from producer: "The result is a raster product where each pixel represents the height of top of canopy above ground, for all classified vegetation objects above a threshold of 2.5 metres. The data production is fully automated, with no manual QC and editing of the output, other than visual checks. Because of the process to classify objects based on proximity to features within OS mapping, there could be some misclassifications of objects not included in the OS mapping (especially static caravans, shipping containers, large tents/marquees, coastal cliffs and new buildings constructed directly under tree cover). This is the first release of this dataset, the quality of the production methods will be reviewed over the next year and improvements made where possible."

For areas outside of England, similar data has been modelled by WRI and Meta.

UKHabitat Best Guess Baseline including the Vegetation Data overlaid on LiDAR from the Environment Agency.

The outputs are generated in the Baseline Habitat Assessment template with the code "w: Woodland". We recommend delineating their habitat type further into whether they are at least "w1+: Broadleaved and Yew Woodland", "w2+: Coniferous Woodland" or "h3: Dense scrub" (or UKHab codes at lower levels to these e.g "w1c: Lowland beech and yew woodland"). See How to assign a use for more information.

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