Mountain
The montane areas of Scotland are generally regarded as ground beyond 700m above sea level.
This is roughly the elevation of the former tree-line, where scrub and woodland remain scarce and where habitats are near-natural.
Montane habitats consist mainly of moss and lichen heaths, snow beds, blanket bog and terraces of dwarf-shrub heath. Approximately 12 per cent of Scotland's land surface (3 per cent of Great Britain) is montane.
Publications and Resources
- Montane
Scrub - part of the Natural Heritage Management series, read online

- Revival of the land: Creag Meagaidh National Nature Reserve - order from our publications department
