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2010 Press Releases:
- UKMap Supports Climate Change Research on Trees
- FREE GeoDATA Seminars Visit Glasgow and Belfast this November
- The GeoInformation Group Targets Properties Requiring Loft Insulation
- TGG Contributes to Bournemouth's "Go-Green" Initiative
- The GeoInformation Group Selected by Forestry Commission to Update Ancient Woodland Inventory
- The Highland Council Wins BCS Award for Mapping Innovation
- The GeoInformation Group Reveals London In Just One Day
- GeoDATA 2010 Regarded As "Must-See Event For All Professionals"
- Cities Revealed's 3D Model Helps Preserve Lincoln's Heritage
- Surrey Heath Adopts Cities Revealed's Carbon Energy Mapping Model
- UKMap® Backed by GIS Professionals
- First Data Consultants to Successfully Complete UKMap® Accreditation Programme
- The GeoInformation Group's Customers Recognised for Innovation
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UKMap Supports Climate Change Research on Trees
The GeoInformation® Group announces the supply of UKMap, a highly detailed and feature-rich mapping database, to Forest Research for testing the latest climate change models.
Forest Research, the Forestry Commission™s research agency, is Great Britain's principal organisation for forestry and tree related research. With climate change being one of the biggest challenges facing Britain™s trees and forests, Forest Research is tasked with exploring its impact on the UK™s urban tree population and its potential effect on the movement of high-risk organisms through the landscape.
UKMap was acquired to provide the accurate location of trees, adjacent land use and the location and height of surrounding buildings - all significant aspects in the modelling of the changing climate and spatial arrangement of trees and greenspace throughout urban areas.
Andrew Brunt from the Centre for Forestry and Climate Change at Forest Research, comments, “The GIS spatial modelling we are undertaking uses the Oak Processionary moth (a moth that poses a health hazard) as an exemplar that requires highly detailed and accurate data on the environment. Although the Forestry Commission has many datasets of its own, UKMap provides us with various cost-effective sources of data that are key to our research”.
This study will undertake an investigation using empirical and published data to explore how this moth and other potential pests might migrate through urban environments in relation to the location of green space, its connectivity, the structural complexity of the built environment and climate.
This research is just beginning. To find out more, please contact Andy Brunt of Forest Research at: andrew.brunt@forestry.gsi.gov.uk


