Concern for the homogenization of
                        America’s urban landscape prompted a recent research study into the care and
                        maintenance of residential landscapes. The study demonstrated fewer
                        similarities than expected but the concern, according to researchers is that
                        “Lawns not only cover a larger extent [of land] than any other irrigated
                        ‘crop’ in the U.S., but are expected to expand in coming decades. The
                        researchers go on to point out that the potential homogenization of residential
                        lawn care has emerged as a major concern for carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus and
                        water flows.”
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Published in in this week’s issue
                        of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), ecologists
                        Colin Polsky of Clark University in Worcester, MA, Peter Groffman of the
                        Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies in Millbrook, NY, and colleagues from 10
                        other institutions are the lawn care habits from 6 cities representing various
                        native environments including desert, plain, mountain and coastal.
“The approach in this study
                        can be used to test other ideas about how people who live in cities–now more
                        than three-quarters of Americans–decide to manage their yards,” says
                        Henry Gholz, a program director in NSF’s Division of Environmental Biology.
“This should open a new phase
                        in the field of urban ecology.”
The scientists “homogenization
                        hypothesis,” theorized and tested that despite local environmental
                        conditions, urbanization produces similar human land management behaviors. The
                        study used the results from 9,500 residents in San Diego, Miami, Philadelphia,
                        Chicago, Phoenix and Levittown, NY, questioning irrigation and fertilization
                        habits in the similar style neighborhoods.
Of the respondents, 63 percent
                        fertilized their yards and 79 percent watered within the last year. There were
                        some similarities as well as differences in lawn care practices from city to city.
For instance, in Los Angeles, 66
                        percent of younger residents fertilized their lawns, while 73 percent of older
                        residents did. Minneapolis-St. Paul demonstrated similar breakdown with 68 and
                        76 percent, respectively.
The concern however is ecosystem
                        sustainability and the most widespread indicator may be immediately in front of
                        us each and every day. Because lawn fertilizer contains
                        nutrients such as phosphorus and nitrogen that wash into waterways, unwanted
                        and ecologically detrimental blooms of algae can and will rob fish and other
                        aquatic species of oxygen and degrading water quality.
And while according to Polsky,
                        “responding to lawn care-related environmental challenges may require
                        locally-tailored solutions in more cases than we thought,” Groffman adds
                        that suburban and urban lawns now “occupy an extensive area in the U.S.
                        and have effects–good and bad–on environmental quality, and on human quality
                        of life” making residential landscapes critical to sustainability science.
Read more at the National Science
                        Foundation.
Urban lawn care image via Shutterstock.



