Rooftop farming on urban waste provides many ecosystem services

green roof [SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] 577 710 produc- tive rooftop [SDV.SA.SDS]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences/Soil study 01 natural sciences 7. Clean energy 12. Responsible consumption urban farming urban farming, ecosystem services, Technosol, urban waste, green roof, urban garden, productive rooftop, green infrastructure Urban farming Technosol Green roof 11. Sustainability Ecosystem services urban waste 0105 earth and related environmental sciences 2. Zero hunger Urban waste Urban garden green infrastructure. Green infrastructure 15. Life on land 6. Clean water Productive rooftop urban garden 13. Climate action [SDE]Environmental Sciences ecosystem services Urban farming;Ecosystem services;Technosol;Urban waste;Green roof;Urban garden;Productive rooftop;Green infrastructure
DOI: 10.1007/s13593-017-0474-2 Publication Date: 2017-12-19T07:30:54Z
ABSTRACT
Urban farming, especially on rooftops, is a popular and growing topic in both the media and the scientific literature, providing a genuine opportunity to meet some of the challenges linked to urban development worldwide. However, relatively little attention has been paid to date to the growing medium of green roofs, i.e., Technosols. A better understanding of the influence of Technosols and the link with ecosystem services is required in order to maximize the environmental benefits of urban rooftop farming. Between March 2013 and March 2015, a pilot project called T4P (Parisian Productive rooftoP, Pilot Experiment) was conducted on the rooftop of AgroParisTech University. Urban organic waste was used, and results were compared with those obtained using a commercial potting soil, based on yield and trace metal concentrations, substrate characterization, and the amount of leaching. An assessment of the ecosystem services expected from the Technosols was undertaken in terms of the output of food (food production and quality), regulation of water runoff (quantity and quality), and the recycling of organic waste. Indicators of these ecosystem services (e.g., yield, annual loss of mass of mineral nitrogen) were identified, measured, and compared with reference cases (asphalt roof, green roof, and cropland). Measured yields were almost equivalent to those obtained from horticultural sources in the same area, and the Technosols also retained 74–84% of the incoming rainfall water. This is the first quantitative analysis of ecosystem services delivered by urban garden rooftops developed on organic wastes, and demonstrates their multifunctional character, as well as allowing the identification of trade-offs. An ecosystem services approach is proposed for the design of soil-based green infrastructure of this kind and more generally for the design of sustainable urban agriculture.
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