Botany One on Nostr: The findings challenge assumptions the public and politicians make about ...
The findings challenge assumptions the public and politicians make about ‘brownfield’ sites. Rather than seeing unused railways as wasteland, we could view them as accidental nature reserves, providing safe spaces where different types of plants can thrive. They might even help connect isolated patches of wildlife habitat across intensively farmed landscapes, creating green corridors for nature.
Published at
2024-11-21 20:30:03Event JSON
{
"id": "de84679d02e8c0735f2ea80b15dfcf94d14f18c5c765b7d7e132395efa0c594c",
"pubkey": "90f20b46036dc8275495093b77b32234e685907c7af246dc8274e63c8494289f",
"created_at": 1732221003,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"e",
"a3d6ac1a55d977a19e15dfbdcc3ca576e934b1f20676f91cd77b43842a4724b7",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub",
"reply"
],
[
"proxy",
"https://botany.social/users/botanyone/statuses/113522835708342273",
"activitypub"
]
],
"content": "The findings challenge assumptions the public and politicians make about ‘brownfield’ sites. Rather than seeing unused railways as wasteland, we could view them as accidental nature reserves, providing safe spaces where different types of plants can thrive. They might even help connect isolated patches of wildlife habitat across intensively farmed landscapes, creating green corridors for nature.",
"sig": "a25e5f87684512370f768aed3ac72cc8ef66056d769d10f1f06414b452ece83ebb9e0740cd1db33b95543739340ca9481217bdca196289d6ae057e693c02978b"
}