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The factors of the urban ecosystem peculiar to man's activities are
the engineering factors. Utilities, sewers, streets, walks, and
buildings are usually located with the highest priority. Man's
engineering capacity makes no task insurmountable, and the landscape can
be arranged to suit. Soil is compacted, ground water is diverted, great
areas of shade are created by large buildings, and rivers are relocated
or encased in concrete. Most plants and animals are included in the
urban ecosystem only after all other economic requirements have been
satisfied: funds for plants have lower priority than those for
engineeringa building and a street are functional without
landscaping. In budget squeezes these items are usually reduced or
eliminated. The plants of the urban ecosystem must be provided for under
some provision other than construction or engineering funds.
Plantsparticularly treesthen must be selected for their
adaptability to the respective niches of the community. This has worked
out remarkably well in many casesand very poorly in others (in
many downtown areas to the complete exclusion of plants other than those
in pots). The obvious conclusion is that the urban ecosystem can be
arranged to provide adequate environmental circumstances for the
plantsif they are wanted.
And like all other engineering contingencies, preparations for
incorporating vegetation into the city must be made before the streets
are paved and the foundations excavated, it is probably true that most
of our oldest, most valuable street plantings date from a time before
the streets were paved. Originating about 1910 or 1915, they grew to
maturity without pavement over their roots and with abundant fertilizer
from animal traffic.
If construction of facing buildings is carried out in such a way that
maturation of streetside plantings is possible, living beauty can easily
be designed into the city environment.
Once created, the urban ecosystem is managed and maintained by man.
The choice of species in the plant communities of the ecosystem is not
left to chance. Species that would otherwise not occur in the
geographical area can be introduced. Species that otherwise would be
quite rare can be propagated and used in large numbers. Species can be
genetically improved. The latter is not a simple problem with species
that may require 20 years to produce flowers, but great strides can be
made by selecting seeds or cuttings from outstanding individuals of the
species. The plant community of the urban ecosystem, like any other part
of man's environment, can be designed.
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