From the roundabout garden to the park meadose, how are the Canadian cities encouraging pollpers
A lot of work has been done to rehabilitate small patches of land in the center of small roundabouts on Glenn Drive and 10th Avenue. In Vancouver, but for Katie Burlinguate, it was the labor of love.
“I live in an apartment, like a lot of Vancouvars, and I don’t have an courtyard or a yard,” she said, when she went in search of space in a community garden in this spring, she found that the waiting list was long – an average of about three to five years.
“During my internet search, I got Green roads programWhich is the next best thing. ,
Soon, he adopted a roundabout near his apartment with a single overcrowding rose which was about six feet high. Now, the place that passes every day is a pollination garden, which is filled with native plants such as red-flowered current and lupine, as well as food plants and herbs. He also installed a solar-driven fountain.
She wanted to fill the space with dried tolerant plants, a major priority, as it is difficult to get water in space.
“And then it is very important to be aware of the environment with indigenous plants, very important, and it is also what people in the neighborhood have asked for.”
For the last few weeks, Burlinguate has been documenting his journey On tiktok In the hope of encouraging others to find garden methods in the city.
“This is a very busy cycle route and people are staying every day that they see me and say thanks.”
Small changes make a difference in urban places
For the Kaushal Rathanayake, protecting the abode of pollinators such as a pollist, bees, butterflies and kites at the New Breanswick University is important to protect our own good.
Pollinants are an important part of healthy ecosystems, with about three-fourths of people with plants of the world Pollute,

“We are destroying their houses and we are destroying their food sources and we are creating inhuman environment for these insects,” he said.
“Climate change is a big driver for their extinction, therefore, we have to protect them and we have to take action to improve their good.”
No-mow can be where residents are encouraged Let their lawn grow for the month When they come out of hibernation, pollinators can flourish An idea that is caught in CanadaAs is the pollutor garden like a Burlinguate. But to properly support pollinators, experts say that biodiversity is important, and it requires large -scale long -term changes.
This is the heart of Jens Ularich’s work as a PhD candidate at the University of British Columbia, where he only wrapped Three -year study Showing that even small changes in urban green places – such as adding a small meadow to a city park – can create a big difference for pollination variety.
A new UBC study suggests that wildflower meadows planting and grass cutting in city parks have increased wild B and hoverfly diversity. The extracts of the so -called “parks” are shaping the city’s plan to make urban places more pollinate. Daniel Piper’s report.
Ularich Vancouver is collaborating with the city, to see how the park management affects pollpers.
Eighteen parks were surveyed during the study, maintained with half as they would be normally. For other parks, Ularich and his team created pollinators by cutting grass cuts and wildflower seeds. He chose areas within the parks that had low foot traffic, so the plains would be less disruptive for those using parks.
Oak Meadows Park, one of the nine areas that the team revised with pollinators, now includes a meadow next to a football ground. It contains some long vegetation, including some native plants such as lupine.
learning outcomePublished in ecological letters later last year, it was shown that Meadows had a huge impact. Many pollinators, such as bumblers, sweat bees, honey bees, bees in the mine and hoverflies, once came to the parks after introducing grasslands, came to the parks, and lived during three years.
“I am confident that we guessed our traditionally managed spaces with 30 species per park, with about 60 species per park in the park with grounds,” said Ulrig.
As a result of the success of the project, nine grasslands have been maintained in the city, and more parks have been included in more parks to expand the project. The Vancouver Parks Board Landscape Architect Jack Tupper, who works with Ularich, says the city intends to convert some of its six million square meters lawn into a more beneficial habitat.
“This is something that every city should do,” said Taper. “We found that the meadose we implemented between 2020 and 2023 were very beneficial for the ecology of our city.”
He said that the soil under the grasslands retained moisture and stopped the cooler – it also acts like a carbon sink, an area that absorbs more carbon from the atmosphere as it issues. He also found that fungi and earthworm communities increased in parks along with grounds.
“We are finding that the meadows are environmentally and ecological very much balanced, which is really important through our summer months,” Topper said.
He says that the seven percent lawn – about 42 hectares of the city have been converted into grasslands, with a target of 10 percent by 2030.
The city has also shared its findings with municipal colleagues across the country in the hope that they will do the same.
Importance of public pollination space
In NB, pollutor biologist Ratnayake first saw an optic in pollutant gardens in the province around 2019. They have since seen the municipalities, and have taken initiative to make the province, pollination place.
Because there are more backyard than city parks, Ratnayake feels that both cities and individuals can help. Their dream is to create a huge network of pollpers and grasslands that can be used to encourage pollinators in urban settings.
He says that it is the responsibility of every municipality, “not only to be a beautiful landscape, but to support the local biodiversity.”

He says that Frederichton is doing a good job of setting an example and educating the public.
“If you go to the city and go to every roundabout, you will see that they are planting a lot of pollination plants and they are giving a small example for people passing through every day that we need to take action.”
Rathnayake, who is also a volunteer teacher for the Frederichtan Botanical Garden, said that trying for biodiversity does not mean that leaving an entire yard to sacrifice and sacrifice settles. Through the work of this volunteer, he teaches people what plants use to create and maintain spaces in their own yard.
“You only need a small dedicated patch where you can have a well -organized pollination gardens.”
Moths, beetles, hummingbirds and flies are all pollinators – with bees, of course – which can be helped by planting pollinators garden.