Some plants are true survivors, they naturally grow ininhospitable situations, for instance rocky crevasses or windswept costal
cliffs. Some of these plants have become quite at home in our urban
environment, especially due to the heat island effect (which accommodates the
less hardy species and annuals) and the sheer amounts of artificial rocks we
have created with our walls, buildings and pavements.
Sedum reflexum also known as Prick-madam (left) grows
naturally on dry soils and rock, so a garden wall is ideal. This succulent can
live off the occasional rain runoff and stores it in its glaucous fleshy leaves.
This tiny Bellflower (Campanula rotundifolia) likes the relative dampness this
crevasse between the plinth of a building and the edge of the pavement provides.
Thrift (Armeria maritima) is often found near the coast, but also thrives along
motorways where winter gritting (the application of a mixture of sand and salt)
creates an environment that hampers the growth of most plants. This little
plant with pink flowers also grows in great abundance on former industrial
wasteland, especially with metal pollution.
Other plants grow where few plants manage to hang on
to life. Nestling in the gaps between paving slabs these plants either grow
very fast making the most of the heat radiating of the concrete, or store food
in their roots to resprout after having been destroyed at ground level.
On the left a plant originally from North America that
feels right at home in the urban environment: Disc mayweed (Matricaria
discoidea). It is an annual exuding a sweet scent when crushed. Finger grass
(Digitaria) is also an annual that now grows worldwide, but originated in
subtropical Eurasia. It is well at home in pavements where its seeds germinate
earlier than in normal soil. The Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale agg.) is known
to most people for its seed heads and its yellow composite flowers. The tiny
seeds can grow into plants even in between pavement slabs. The taproot grows
over time sustaining the growth above. Normally these plants are seen in
meadows and lawns.
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