Patches of wildflowers in cities can be just as good for insects as natural meadows
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/nov/20/patches-of-wildflowers-in-cities-can-be-just-as-good-for-insects-as-natural-meadows-study-aoe
Patches of wildflowers in cities can be just as good for insects as natural meadows study
Researchers found no difference in the diversity of species in urban meadows compared with those in rural settings
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Phoebe Weston
Wed 20 Nov 2024 05.32 EST
Small patches of wildflowers sown in cities can be a good substitute for a natural meadow, according to a study which showed butterflies, bees and hoverflies like them just as much.
Councils are increasingly making space for wildflower meadows in cities in a bid to tackle insect decline, but their role in helping pollinating insects was unclear. Researchers working in the Polish city of Warsaw wanted to find out if these efforts were producing good results.
They found there was no difference in the diversity of species that visited sown wildflower meadows in cities compared with natural ones, according to the study published in the journal Ecological Entomology, and led by researchers from Warsaw University. The researchers said: In inner-city areas, flower meadows can compensate insects for the lack of large natural meadows that are usually found in the countryside.
This study confirmed that small areas of urban wildflowers have a high concentration of pollinating insects, and are as valuable to many pollinators as larger areas of natural meadow that you would typically find rurally. In this way, we can alleviate the hostile environment of urban space for wildlife, the researchers wrote.
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