Proposal:Dehesa
Dehesa | |
---|---|
Proposal status: | Abandoned (inactive) |
Applies to: | area |
Definition: | New land use type for dehesas |
Rendered as: | Meadow green with dark-green dots |
Draft started: | 2019-08-30 |
Proposal
Although there is a general consensus that we should keep things as simple as possible concerning land use tags, their current structure reflects mainly the types of land you would find in Britain or places with a similar climate. Some of them can be adapted to other climates, but sometimes you come across areas that are difficult to fit in the existing scheme. One of such areas is, in my opinion, the Spanish dehesa (Portuguese montado).
Rationale
A dehesa is a type of man-made land use that has existed for centuries in the Southwestern quarter of the Iberian Peninsula. It is a sparsely-treed forest (Quercus species) in which the ground is cultivated or used as pasture for grazing animals.
Examples
Please refer to the Wikipedia article on dehesas to see more information and images.
https://www.dehesamontado.eu/index.php/en/
Tagging
I suggest adopting the tag landuse=dehesa for this type of land use (or landuse=dehesamontado, combining the Portuguese and Spanish names for it). There is a suggestion to use grassland=dehesa, but this is not accurate, since a dehesa can be a combination of farmland and forest (with no grassland).
Discrimination
A dehesa is not just a sparsely-treed forest, because there's farmland/pastures among the trees.
A dehesa is not just farmland, because it's an area covered by trees.
A dehesa is not a meadow, because instead of pastures it can be used for agriculture (cereals/sunflowers).
A dehesa is not a savanna, because savannas are natural regions and dehesas are man-made.
Applies to
Areas
Rendering
I would suggest using a meadow-coloured background with dark-green points symbolising the trees.
Comments
Please comment on the Talk:Proposed features/Dehesa.