Every spot of green space plays a vital role in our health

An international study of parks and gardens has found that even the humble roadside verge plays an important role in the environment and for our health.

The city park may be an artificial ecosystem, but it plays a key role in the environment and our health.

The study found that even nature strips contribute a range of important microbial communities that are critical for sustaining productive ecosystem services, such as filtering pollutants and sequestering carbon dioxide.

“Parks are not the homogenised ecological deserts that we think they are – they are living ecosystems that do amazing things,” study co-author, Professor David Eldridge from the University of NSW says.

“Urban greenspaces harbour important microbes, so if you want to sustain a bunch of ecosystem services, you need to have plenty of parks and green spaces.”

The study took soil samples from different types of urban green spaces and comparable neighbouring natural ecosystems in 56 cities from 17 countries across six continents.

The urban greenspaces studied included Olympic Park in Beijing, the University of Queensland campus in Brisbane, Retiro in Madrid Spain, and the park surrounding Uppsala Castle in Uppsala, Sweden.

With 68 per cent of the global population set to live in cities by 2050, the study suggests that urban green spaces are critically important for promoting mental and physical wellbeing.

Parks and gardens make up most of the open spaces available for recreational activities such as sport and social engagement, and play important roles in curbing pollution, reducing noise, and lowering air temperatures, the study says.

Moreover, human exposure to soil microbes has been shown to be beneficial to human health by promoting effective immunoregulation functions and reducing allergies.

The study found green spaces support many fast-growing microbes that use fertilisers and irrigation water, and that can colonise bare soils. These included important fungal root pathogens such as Fusarium, microorganisms capable of removing nitrogen from sewerage, and many bacteria-feeding amoebae.

But the study found that green spaces also harboured a greater proportion of fungal parasites and plant pathogens that are often economically important pests.

Green spaces in some countries also host microbes that were linked to human pathogens, such as listeria and diptheria.

“The really interesting thing is that there was a strong link between a country’s Gross Domestic Product and the abundance of the microbes that caused human diseases,” Prof. Eldridge says.

“One of the reasons could be a greater use of antibiotics in developing nations, and therefore greater microbe controlled antibiotic resistance. Sewerage water containing antibiotics is then used to water greenspaces. So while parks are good, there is a warning that some of the soil in these urban green spaces do harbour some of these toxic microbes, particularly in poorer cities.”

Prof. Eldridge says the results mirror a study in Central Park in New York, which found there was as much microbial diversity in the city park as there is globally. “City parks harbour a range of microbial communities that are different to natural ecosystems,” he says.

The study found that even road verges were full of important microbes.

“We think of roadsides as being barren, but we found a great variety of different microbes in some roadside verges; they are not barren wastelands at all,” Prof. Eldridge says.

“Some European cities such as Bern in Switzerland have a policy to protect the natural vegetation along footpaths and roadsides. These pathways then become mini-green spaces, linking larger green spaces. We need lots of different microbes, and to get this, we need a variety of landscapes such as median strips, parks, and nature reserves.”

Lead author Dr Manu Delgado-Baquerizo from the Universidad Pablo de Olavide in Spain says the study found that urban green spaces from all over the world are very similar.

“They often have lawns, and similar management practices, which tend to homogenise the microbes living in different global cities,” Dr Delgado-Baquerizo says.

What are the green spaces like in your area? Do you think you have enough green space in your community or would you like to see more?

4 comments

Yes, I like to rest my eyes in shades of green.

The more urban green spaces the better IMO.

I have a very green area in my own LARGE garden-- and many around me also, however more homes are being built and not caring much about green areas --we need many more.

Everyone should think about the wildlife and even the insects etc -- they are ALL very important

Recently I was returning home from walking, when I found two young girls sitting in my front garden

under some trees. They apologised for being on the property, but I said they were welcome. One said:

It's just so beautiful here.

When I was younger, we used to like having private places to hide away ( as many children do), far from

the eyes of adults and others who seemed to occupy our lives. We were indeed privileged to have those

places. Today, there seem to be more and more units replacing the private residential gardens. I am not

opposed to units per se, because they are preferred by many who don't want to maintain a garden, or

have any number of reasons to be in a unit.

I fear the era of the suburban garden is fast approaching its end, with Councils gleefully expanding their rate base,

and State governments vigorously pursuing  policies of densification. Public parks are not always in close

proximity, and sometimes are not that safe for children.

It is a vexed and complex issue. Money is at the heart of it. And our personal life style choices.

I'm just hoping that todays children will grow up to value their natural environment above the pursuit

of easy money. Green areas are priceless.

 

4 comments



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