Employing Green Roofs to Support Endangered Plant Species: The Eastern Suburbs Banksia Scrub in Australia

J. Blair, P. Osmond
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Abstract

The purpose and context for the study relates to urban growth. Australian cities are experiencing particularly rapid urbanization, taking the form of land clearing to accommodate outward expansion as well as developing to higher densities in existing urban areas. Both forms of development degrade native biodiversity, resulting in loss of vegetation with the possibility that the remnant indigenous plants will become locally extinct. One endangered ecological community in Sydney, the Eastern Suburbs Banksia Scrub (ESBS), still survives along some sections of Sydney’s heavily urbanized coastline. At the time of European settlement, the ESBS covered approximately 5300 ha, but it is now a highly fragmented 146 ha across 24 sites with some sites under imminent threat of development. Conservation legislation enacted by the state of New South Wales (NSW), Australia has declared the ESBS as critically endangered. Despite recovery plans, in 2016 the NSW Threatened Species Scientific Committee indicated that the community faces an extremely high risk of extinction in Australia in the immediate future. A practical option in the face of declining open space in our cities is to examine the potential of urban rooftops for conserving and propagating threatened or endangered flora. While there is a limited amount of international research on using green roofs for endangered plant protection, there is no information from Australia about how green roofs perform in this geographic region. The approach taken in this research has been firstly, to review the current academic and “grey” literature from a global perspective to identify options for conserving endangered flora on green roofs. We derive an evidence-based research protocol to be used to test the green roof environment in Sydney for propagating the endangered ESBS. We establish the general applicability of green roofs for protecting vanishing flora through the literature review and conclude that our research design will be a suitable framework for the task for monitoring growth and germination performance over the ESBS community’s development cycle, with the longer-term objective of establishing a viable rooftop seed orchard.
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利用绿色屋顶来支持濒危植物物种:澳大利亚东郊班克斯灌木
这项研究的目的和背景与城市增长有关。澳大利亚的城市正在经历特别迅速的城市化,采取土地清理的形式来适应向外扩张,并在现有的城市地区发展到更高的密度。这两种形式的发展都降低了本地生物多样性,导致植被的丧失,剩余的本地植物可能会在当地灭绝。悉尼东郊灌木群落(ESBS)是悉尼一个濒临灭绝的生态群落,它仍然存活在悉尼城市化程度很高的海岸线的一些地区。在欧洲人定居时,ESBS占地约5300公顷,但现在它是一个高度分散的146公顷,分布在24个地点,其中一些地点面临迫在眉睫的发展威胁。澳大利亚新南威尔士州(NSW)颁布了保护立法,宣布ESBS为极度濒危物种。尽管有恢复计划,但2016年新南威尔士州濒危物种科学委员会表示,该社区在不久的将来在澳大利亚面临极高的灭绝风险。面对城市开放空间的减少,一个实际的选择是研究城市屋顶在保护和繁殖受威胁或濒危植物方面的潜力。虽然国际上关于使用绿色屋顶保护濒危植物的研究数量有限,但澳大利亚没有关于绿色屋顶在该地理区域的表现的信息。本研究采用的方法首先是从全球角度回顾当前的学术和“灰色”文献,以确定保护绿色屋顶上濒危植物的选择。我们得出了一个基于证据的研究方案,用于测试悉尼的绿色屋顶环境,以传播濒危的ESBS。通过文献综述,我们建立了绿色屋顶在保护消失植物群方面的普遍适用性,并得出结论,我们的研究设计将是一个合适的框架,用于监测ESBS群落发展周期中的生长和萌发性能,并建立一个可行的屋顶种子果园。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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