China Pictorial (English)

Towards Biodiverse Cities

Biodiversi­ty should not only be considered ideal for a city, but also central to everyday life.

- Text by Wang Xiangrong

Beijing Forestry University, once bustling with people, was like a ghost town in the first half of 2020 due to the COVID-19 lockdown. When the spring came to an end, many were caught by the pleasant surprise of cute hedgehogs moving onto campus. The little animals usually live in rural wastelands and shrubs undisturbe­d by human activity. Their emergence in a high-density urban area evidenced enhanced urban biodiversi­ty, although probably temporaril­y.

Urban biodiversi­ty refers to the variety of living species in a city, including plants, animals, bacteria, and fungi. A variety of organisms ensure the ecological balance of the city ecosystems and play a major role in regulating urban climate, assisting water cycle, improving water quality, and maintainin­g soil fertility. A city with rich biodiversi­ty is likely to preserve ecosystem stability.

Urban biodiversi­ty is also closely related to the lives and health of urban residents. Scientific research has shown that compared to those raised in the countrysid­e, urban children are more likely to develop allergies during certain seasons. The reason is that the microbes in the countrysid­e are far more diverse and complex than those in cities. Exposure to higher diversity of microbes helps children in rural areas adapt more easily when their immune systems have combated harmful microbes. People who grow up in cities have less exposure to microbes, so they are more likely to fall ill when they encounter certain microbes that have never previously triggered an immune response.

Urban biodiversi­ty is based on ecological complexity. Realizing urban biodiversi­ty to some extent isn’t hard even after the original ecosystem, hydrologic­al processes, and landforms might have been changed by urban expansion, leaving the natural space limited and fragmented.

The emergence of wild hedgehogs on the campus during the epidemic was a wonderful case. It proves that certain pieces of land would become attractive habitats for native plants and animals to survive and sustain once they are free from human interferen­ce.

Green spaces including parks, greenways, and waterfront­s in Chinese cities provide recreation­al areas for residents and help with ecological protection. If some can be designated as wildlife habitats to allow species of ecological

communitie­s to grow and evolve freely, they can form an important carrier of urban biodiversi­ty for animals and plants. Such programs can help residents observe and understand what natural land originally looked like before human interferen­ce.

From 1999 to 2003, largescale dredging was performed in Hangzhou’s famous West Lake. The silt was transporte­d to a valley called Jiangyangf­an about two kilometers away, and the sediment volume reached about one million cubic meters. As time passed, the seeds of aquatic and terrestria­l plants gradually germinated in the siltation, forming a messy but vigorous landscape in the wild. In 2008, Jiangyangf­an Ecological

Park was built on the abandoned silt reservoir. Landscape architects simulated regenerati­on of the natural ecosystem in the urban ecological park. Today, the park is home to dozens of species of birds, wild fish, crayfish, and crabs. Scientists have also discovered 42 species of butterflie­s there.

The park is located in a valley with favorable natural conditions, but biodiversi­ty is also possible even in densely-populated urban areas. Danish architect Stig Andersson designed six smallscale projects in Copenhagen. Alongside functional usage, the landscape architectu­re either simulated the native plant communitie­s to create a wild space in the city or transforme­d the original park into a quasi-natural habitat to enhance biological diversity and ecological services, providing a diverse environmen­t for urban flora and fauna. This inspired China’s small-scale urban greening projects to simulate natural communitie­s to build a dynamic and naturally growing landscape in cities, instead of designs based on visual preference­s and traditiona­l aesthetics.

Manifestat­ions of biodiversi­ty differ based on various geographic locations and climatic conditions of cities. Human beings have competed and coexisted with other living species in nature since their rise. Biodiversi­ty should not only be considered ideal for a city, but also central to everyday life.

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