If someone asked you to offer a comprehensive urban ecology meaning, would you know what to say?
If your answer was something along the lines of “like, life in cities?” then join the crowd. Even people in the ecological and sustainability spaces have a hard time offering a true urban ecology meaning. The topic of life in the built environment is a big one, and we often forget crucial aspects of the definition.
Where we’re not forgetting things, we’re disagreeing on them. It’s a problem, especially when we try to sum up the concept in a single sentence, which often does more harm than good.
We’re not blameless here at Ecogardens, which is why we’ve been working hard lately to develop a more well-rounded urban ecology meaning and share it with our followers.
Want in? Read on.
The first problem with defining ecology in cities is that we’re constantly limiting that definition. We simply don’t take it far enough.
How? Well, we limit our urban ecology meaning in several ways:
The definition of urban ecology, however, encompasses all life in cities big and small (and more broadly, human environments) – and that’s including us humans.
To understand the complex web of organisms that inhabit our urban spaces, both plant and animal, requires an urban ecology meaning that a) includes us and b) is broader than our towns and metropolises.
Problematically, these urban areas aren’t as dense as you think they are. Of the 75,000 identified “distinct urban settlements,” only 24,000 of them had 5,000 or more inhabitants. That means our cities sprawl into wild areas and we’re not even using them that well. Nor does this include suburbia and the vast tracts of farmed and sparsely settled human habitation.
The numbers are only growing, too.
As Indiana University’s Urban Ecology Field Station points out, “A single generation from today, by 2030, the population of the world's cities will grow by 2 billion more people. At present, about half of the humans on earth live in urban areas.” By 2030, this number will rise to 60 per cent – nearly two-thirds the population.
So why isn’t an urban ecology meaning confined to city borders enough? Essentially, because our activities are not confined to cities.
That has impact. Like, big time.
Instead, it encompasses all life forms in every city in the world.
A true urban ecology meaning should include the interplay of all living things in towns and rural settlements … and even human impacts in wild areas. We need to ask questions like:
This is something we talk about in our interview with Keith Bowers, which covers critical ideas such as rewilding (reclaiming land from humans and giving it back to animals) and stormwater management in urban areas.
We encourage you to read it today to enrich your understanding of urban ecology and build a better meaning today, and be sure to share the free download with your friends and colleagues.
And if you want to discuss building healthier cities and increasing your urban ecological awareness, Ecogardens is here. Get in touch today.