The hectad (10 × 10 km square) distributions of the 1405 native British and Irish vascular plants were classified by the SPHERIKM cluster analysis program into 20 clusters, each of which is characterised by the key species used to initiate the cluster. The clusters reflect the influence of climate, altitude, geology and habitat on distribution patterns at this scale. Clusters with restricted distributions have high concentrations of threatened species, particularly the Medicago sativa cluster, centred on Breckland (55% of the species are threatened in Britain, although only 29% are regarded as priorities for conservation), and the Carex atrata cluster of montane species (45% threatened, and 49% conservation priority species). Some clusters are composed predominantly of species with similar European distributions whereas others are much more phytogeographically heterogeneous. A comparison with a similar analysis of the distribution of British and Irish mosses and liverworts reveals many similarities, especially between the vascular plants and the mosses, although there are many more common vascular plants than bryophytes and many more coastal species.Keywords: Climate, Cluster analysis, Coast, Geology, Phytogeography, SPHERIKM, Threat 2
IntroductionThe systematic collection of information on the distribution of British and Irish vascular plants has been a major preoccupation of botanists for over 150 years. Initially, records were summarised for groups of counties, called 'provinces' in Britain (Watson 1847-59) and 'districts' in Ireland (Moore & More 1866), then for sub-provinces (Watson 1872), vice-counties (Watson 1873-74;Praeger 1901) and latterly for 10-km grid squares (Perring & Walters 1962). However, there have been relatively few attempts to analyse patterns of distribution revealed by the data which have been compiled so meticulously. Watson (1847-59) did use the data he had collected on the occurrence of species in provinces to identify the 'types of distribution' shown by British species. His 'types' were widely used in the 19th century by the authors of county floras to analyse the phytogeographical make-up of the plants in their areas (Preston & Hill 1997), but they were replaced in the 20th century by classifications based on the wider distribution of species, following E.J. Salisbury (1932) and J.R. Matthews (1937Matthews ( , 1955. Praeger (1902) devised a similar classification of Irish plants into distributional types but these were never widely used.The Atlas of the British Flora (Perring & Walters 1962) provided distribution maps which, because of their finer scale, revealed much closer correlations with ecological factors such as altitude, climate and geology than had been apparent from previous maps. At the same time methods of numerical classification were being devised which provided more objective ways of classifying distribution patterns than earlier classifications by eye and expert judgement. Proctor (1967), for example, analysed the vice-comital distribution of British liverworts by...