The Daily News Egypt

Urban green spaces help control floods, store carbon

Researcher took soil samples from 100 sites around city of Madison

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Urban green spaces like backyards,city parks,and golf courses contribute substantia­lly to the ecological fabric of our cities—and the wider landscape—and they need to be added to the data ecologists currently use when exploring big questions about our natural world.

In a study published on Wednesday (6 March) in the journal EcosystemA­pplication­s, Carly Ziter, a graduate student at integrativ­e biology professor MonicaTurn­er’s lab at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, took soil samples from 100 sites around the city of Madison,Wisconsin.

To get a sense of how urban areas fit into bigger landscape dynamics, Ziter surveyed cemeteries, the UW Arboretum, public parks, and lots and lots of backyards. Each sample was then analysed for three ecosystem services: carbon storage, water quality regulation, and flood mitigation.

Findings of the study indicate that urban green spaces play a significan­t role in providing some ecosystem services.

“Often when we’re doing regional people’s yards store substantia­lly more carbon in their soils than urban forests or grasslands. Urban soils even stored more carbon on average than the agricultur­al soils that dominate Madison’s surroundin­g landscape.

The paper points out that urban forests and grasslands have a big impact on flood control, allowing water to infiltrate into the soil instead of simply running off into streets or storm sewers. Also, the kind and magnitude of service being provided varied from site to site.

Ziter further said, “my front yard and my backyard can be more different in terms of their ecology than two houses across the city from one another.And that’s really fascinatin­g from a management perspectiv­e,because it’s these small decisions people are making as individual­s that are shaping the ecology of these landscapes.”

She hopes her study can help in highlighti­ng the importance of urban green spaces and encourage more ecologists to start studying these urban environmen­ts.

 ??  ?? Carly Ziter collects soil samples from the backyard of a study participan­t in Madison, WI, to determine the benefits provided by different types of urban green space
Carly Ziter collects soil samples from the backyard of a study participan­t in Madison, WI, to determine the benefits provided by different types of urban green space

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