This could end up being the most radical of all our national parks...
Brú na Bóinne National Park, NPWS — much of the new park is low biodiversity grassland with non-native trees. Pictures: Pádraic Fogarty
In Ireland, nearly 70% of the land is classified as being in agricultural use. More than half of all land in the country is grassland, previously a richly diverse environment with flowers, insects and ground-nesting birds but now a monoculture dependant on high levels of nutrient input and virtually devoid of biodiversity.
Perhaps the county most transformed by agriculture is Meath, up to two-thirds of it is just grass while it has one of the lowest levels of forest or peatlands.
![<p> The International Union for the Conservation of Nature says that “an ecosystem is collapsed when it is virtually certain that its defining biotic [living] or abiotic [non-living] features are lost from all occurrences, and the characteristic native biota are no longer sustained”.</p> <p> The International Union for the Conservation of Nature says that “an ecosystem is collapsed when it is virtually certain that its defining biotic [living] or abiotic [non-living] features are lost from all occurrences, and the characteristic native biota are no longer sustained”.</p>](/cms_media/module_img/9930/4965053_12_augmentedSearch_iStock-1405109268.jpg)