Needed: wild places in urban spaces

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By MARSHALL LEE WEIMER
Capital News Service

LANSING My favorite place at college never had an official name.

I think it used to be an old golf course, but I’m not sure. The tallgrass hid any trace humanity had left there, shrouded by sparkling goldenrod and silenced by rustling leaves.

My friends and I called it Bailey Prairie, named after the dormitory where we lived at Michigan State University.

It was only a vacant field off the edge of campus, but it was a welcoming escape from the residence hall’s boxy confines. A wildlife professor instructed one of my field courses while standing in the tallgrass.

Many others used Bailey Prairie, and not just the dog walkers or hammockers.

In 2018 goldenrod shimmering in the summer sun reclaims what had once been a golf course in East Lansing.

Marshall Lee Weimer

In 2018 goldenrod shimmering in the summer sun reclaims what had once been a golf course in East Lansing.

Goldenrod, asters and milkweed filled the field with bees every summer. Birds snatched insects and sang endless songs at sunset. The sycamores and willows shaded the edge of the Red Cedar River with abundant foliage. 

Once I saw five deer lurking among the trees.

All of this occurred on the same street as the state Capitol a couple of miles away. It was an oasis in the concrete desert of urban sprawl. 

I treasured the sanctuary it provided, not only for the flora and fauna but also for myself.

Nature was constantly present in this metropolitan meadow, but it made me consider a serious question: Are Bailey Prairie and other pockets of untrimmed greenery in urban spaces also wild spaces?

Even small vacant lots offer green space that is beneficial to the environment, says Chris Lepczyk, a professor of urban ecology at Auburn University’s School of Forestry & Wildlife Science in Alabama. “These spaces are important to insects like honeybees and pollinating flies.”

Lepczyk said greenspaces in cities can reduce heat islands by changing the rate at which material absorbs solar radiation. Fewer heat islands shrink a city’s energy emissions and carbon footprint.

“What is or isn’t wild is a philosophical question,” Lepczyk says, “but to an urban ecologist, an empty lot or Central Park could be considered wild spaces.”

Urban ecology is the study of what happens in green space and natural areas within human-dominated landscapes. 

Urban ecologists study nature in diverse human settings from unmanaged woods in suburbs to vacant, weedy lots in city centers. 

It’s important to teach everyone the value of urban natural areas, says Jeff Veglahn, a land steward with the Urban Ecology Center in Milwaukee. They provide solutions to many environmental problems facing cities.

Veglahn says natural space creates a buffer zone of filtration to prevent industrial runoff from brownfields full of chemicals. 

Natural areas provide sanctuary for migratory birds in cities, help cool cities and save energy in the summer, and provide a mental release for city dwellers.

These spaces are significantly smaller than national or state parks. They are a patchwork of backyard-sized islands in a human-dominated landscape.

Veglahn says that when we practice conservation in cities, it opens up our minds to what nature can be. We start to see nature as not something out there, but something we are in.

There are many reasons to value urban natural areas. The question: Do people value those areas?

In the spring 2021, the same area is prepared for development.

Marshall Lee Weimer

In the spring 2021, the same area is prepared for development.

Bailey Prairie, like many unnamed wild places in cities, was flattened for development. Another high-end apartment complex now sits upon its shredded remains. The trees uprooted, the flowers paved over, the birds and rabbits chased out.

I’m sad every time I drive by it. The city officials saw the urban oasis as having more value as unaffordable housing than public green space.

To me, urban natural areas are the force of nature never giving up. 

Wild means that indomitable will of plants to grow out of any crack in the concrete. No matter what happens, nature will find a way to adapt and persist through any hardship. 

When we share our cities with nature, the benefits seem to outweigh the costs.

Veglahn says there could be whole thriving ecological communities in urban areas without disrupting human life.

“It’s amazing what a little piece of land can do.”

Marshall Lee Weimer reports for Great Lakes Echo.

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