Monday, June 15, 2015

Urban Nature: coming up through the cracks



Urban(ised) areas often have a specific flora, due to specific growing conditions found there. This can be the result of a difference in microclimate, availability of water, soil type, presence of a suitable vector for dispersal, presence of suitable pollinators and the lack of predation. As urban areas are warmer due to the heat-island-effect one can see plants usually associated with the Mediterranean in Belgium and Central Germany and central European species in South Sweden. As these plants often have variable flowering times they provide more food for, for instance, insects, so the populations of hoverflies, bees and bumblebees can be considerably higher in the city then in the countryside!



The Welsh Poppy (Meconopsis cambrica) grows in the hills and mountains of Britain, France and Spain, but is equally at home in the shade of an old city wall in Würzburg. Viper's Bugloss (Echium vulgare) is a striking plant with its blue flowers. This relative of the forget-me-not can quickly colonise barren sandy or gravely soils. Here it grows happily in a German parking lot. Nonesuch (Medicago lupulina) is also known as Medick or Bur clover. It can be found in the wild in pastures on sandy soils, but it also grows very well between the wide gaps of this half-open paving (aimed at reducing rainwater run-off and promoting water infiltration).

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