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The edaphic factorsthat is, the factors of the soilof the
urban environment differ radically from those of the natural
environment. To accommodate the automobile, most of the areas likely to
be used by automobiles have been hard surfaced. (There are some notable
exceptions; St. Paul, for instance, still has 300 miles of
unpavedbut oiledstreets.) Sidewalks and streets, parking
lots, and shopping centers have been paved. The paving of great areas of
the cities has created a runoff problem, requiring storm sewers as well
as sewers for domestic and industrial wastes, and has lowered the water
table of the cities. These losses and the use in many cases of plants
with high water requirements have made the demands of the urban
ecosystem for water much higher than the natural ecosystems of the
hinterland. This condition becomes more accentuated as cities move
farther into the grasslands, savannahs, and deserts.
The soil of the city often is composed primarily of graded subsoil.
The original soil may have been an impoverished forest soil with shallow
topsoil that was lost in grading, leaving only organically poor sand and
clay on the surface. Such soils may be high in minerals but are usually
low in humus and other organic matter and are of poor quality for the
growth of plants, often necessitating the bringing in of new topsoil. On
the other hand, more resources are usually available in the city than in
the country, acre for acre, for rehabilitating soils; funds are usually
available to provide fertilizer, sod, soil conditioners, and even new
soil.
Since plants grow in soil and not in the paving materials of the
urban ecosystem, it is the quantity and quality of that soil that
determine the health and vigor of the roots of the plants, which in turn
contribute greatly to the overall vigor of the plant. Plant roots can
and do break the pavement and grow into sewer lines and clog them or
break them. The micro-organisms of the soil can and do attack anything
that is buried in the soil, even if it is plastic or lead coated.
(Ceramics seem to be the only really durable material that can be
buried.)
No higher plants have been successfully grown without roots. For the
ecosystem of man to be populated with the species of higher plants that
he seems to want, allowances must be made for the occupation of the soil
by their roots. For most forest trees used for street or yard plantings
the root systems are widespread (depending largely on the proximity of
other trees) and shallow. The root environment of the plant is probably
the most critical factor for its survival in the urban ecosystem.
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