The flora of the Flemish coastal dunes (Belgium) in a changing landscape
Provoost, S.; Van Landuyt, W. (2001). The flora of the Flemish coastal dunes (Belgium) in a changing landscape, in: Houston, J.A. et al. (Ed.) Coastal dune management: shared experience of European conservation practice: Proceedings of the European Symposium Coastal Dunes of the Atlantic Biogeographical Region Southport, northwest England, September 1998. pp. 393-401
In: Houston, J.A.; Edmondson, S.E.; Rooney, P.J. (Ed.) (2001). Coastal dune management: Shared experience of European conservation practice: Proceedings of the European Symposium Coastal Dunes of the Atlantic Biogeographical Region Southport, northwest England, September 1998. Liverpool University Press: Liverpool. ISBN 0-85323-854-5. XIII, 458 pp.
As in many European countries, the Belgian coastal zone has been subject to quite drastic changes during the past centuries. These changes have taken a number of forms. Suburbanization associated with tourist development is considered the major cause of nature degradation; in fact almost half of the dune area, which originally covered a surface of approximately 7.6km2, has disappeared at the expense of buildings, gardens and roads. Within the remaining dune sites, the natural landscape has changed as a result of different, often interacting, factors such as changes in agricultural land use and recreation. To investigate the influence of several 'natural' and anthropogenic processes on floristic distribution, digitized maps are compared using a GIS. Data can be extracted and put in a database by overlaying the maps with the km2 grid used for floristic inventories.
All data in the Integrated Marine Information System (IMIS) is subject to the VLIZ privacy policy