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heath
(redirected from heathland)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.01 sec.

heath, tract of open land

heath, tract of open land characterized by a few scattered trees, abundant moss cover, and numerous low shrubs, principally of the heath family (see heath heath, in botany, common name for some members of the Ericaceae, a family of chiefly evergreen shrubs with berry or capsule fruits. Plants of the heath family form the characteristic vegetation of many regions with acid soils, particularly the moors, swamps, and
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, in botany). In high-latitude regions with minimal variation in climate, the undershrub vegetation may persist indefinitely on shallow, peaty soils rather than undergoing succession to the climax vegetation (see ecology ecology, study of the relationships of organisms to their physical environment and to one another. The study of an individual organism or a single species is termed autecology; the study of groups of organisms is called synecology.
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), e.g., temperate forests. Alpine azalea, bearberry, dwarf birch, and some insectivorous plants are among the additional flora found on north-temperate heaths.

heath, in botany

heath, in botany, common name for some members of the Ericaceae, a family of chiefly evergreen shrubs with berry or capsule fruits. Plants of the heath family form the characteristic vegetation of many regions with acid soils, particularly the moors, swamps, and mountain slopes of temperate regions throughout the world and, to a lesser extent, of tropical and subarctic regions (see heath heath, tract of open land characterized by a few scattered trees, abundant moss cover, and numerous low shrubs, principally of the heath family (see heath , in botany).
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, in ecology). Many species have attractive blossoms and are consequently popular as wildflowers or, when possible, as cultivated ornamentals, e.g., the rhododendron rhododendron (rō'dədĕn`drən) [Gr.
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, azalea azalea (əzāl`yə) [Gr.
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, mountain laurel mountain laurel, evergreen shrub (Kalmia latifolia) of the family Ericaceae ( heath family), closely related to the rhododendron and native to E North America.
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 (not a true laurel), trailing arbutus trailing arbutus, Mayflower, or ground laurel, one of the best-loved American wildflowers, said by Whittier to have been the first blossom seen on these shores by the Pilgrims (introduction to "The Mayflowers").
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, and heather. The bearberry bearberry, any plant of the northern and alpine genus Arctostaphylos of the family Ericaceae ( heath family), especially A. uvaursi, a trailing evergreen sometimes cultivated as a ground cover.
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 and madroño madroño (mədrōn`yə), tree or shrub (Arbutus menziesii
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 are sometimes grown for the shiny, leathery leaves typical of the family. Other species valued commercially for their edible fruits include the blueberry blueberry, plant of the large genus Vaccinium, widely distributed shrubs (occasionally small trees) of the family Ericaceae ( heath family), usually found on acid soil. They are often confused with the related huckleberry .
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, cranberry cranberry, low creeping evergreen bog plant of the genus Oxycoccus of the family Ericaceae ( heath family). Cranberries are considered by some botanists to belong to the blueberry genus Vaccinium.
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, and huckleberry huckleberry, any plant of the genus Gaylussacia, shrubs of the family Ericaceae ( heath family), native to North and South America. The box huckleberry (G. brachycera) of E North America is evergreen and is often cultivated. The common huckleberry (G.
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. Wintergreen wintergreen or checkerberry, low evergreen plant (Gaultheria procumbens) of the family Ericaceae ( heath family), native to sandy and acid woods (usually of evergreens) of E North America and frequently cultivated.
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 is the source of a flavoring. Sometimes considered a part of the heath family are the pipsissewa and related perennial herbs and the Indian pipe Indian pipe, common name for the genus Monotropa and for the family Monotropaceae, low flowering plants of north temperate zones. They are chlorophylless saprophytes with a funguslike appearance.
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 and related saprophytic (nongreen) plants. The common heather—the heather of Scotland—is Calluna vulgaris, sometimes called ling. Native to Europe and Asia Minor, it is now common also in Greenland and in North America. Its multiple branches have been used for brooms. The names heath and heather are often used interchangeably. Although both are somewhat similar low evergreen shrubs of the Old World, heather has short, scalelike, overlapping leaves and a profusion of long-lasting rosy flowers; the true heaths (genus Erica) have needlelike leaves and white, rose, or yellow flowers. Species of this large genus are characteristic of vast moor areas in W Europe and, especially, South Africa and the Mediterranean area. The root of the tree heath (E. arborea), called also bruyère, brier, brierroot, French brier, and other names, is the major source of brier pipes (see Saint-Claude Saint-Claude (săN-klōd), town (1990 est. pop. 13,265), Jura dept.
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). Heather and a few species of heath are grown as ornamentals; cultivated forms of heather usually have red to purple flowers of a deeper shade than those of the wild types. Other plants of similar habit, particularly those of the same family, are sometimes also called heath or heather. Heath is classified in the division Magnoliophyta Magnoliophyta (măg'nōlēŏf`ətə)
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, class Magnoliopsida, order Ericales, family Ericaceae.
heath
1. Brit a large open area, usually with sandy soil and scrubby vegetation, esp heather
2. any low-growing evergreen ericaceous shrub of the Old World genus Erica and related genera, having small bell-shaped typically pink or purple flowers
3. any of several nonericaceous heathlike plants, such as sea heath
4. Austral any of various heathlike plants of the genus Epacris: family Epacridaceae
5. any of various small brown satyrid butterflies of the genus Coenonympha, with coppery-brown wings, esp the large heath (C. tullia)

Heath
Sir Edward (Richard George). born 1916, British statesman; leader of the Conservative Party (1965--75); prime minister (1970--74)

heath [hēth]


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In the Netherlands, for example, extreme reactive nitrogen levels have changed the Dutch countryside's characteristic heathlands to grasslands.
Extremadura is the huge region of heathland and forest south-west of Madrid extending west to the border of Portugal and south to the Sierra Morena.
European heathlands, long adapted to nitrogen-poor conditions, are giving way to Eurasian grasses under the fertilizing effects of nitrogen.
 
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