Pollinating pathways to a better future

[Music]

imagine a world

without pollinators a world where we

have to use paint brushes

to transfer pollen between plants

this is starting to happen in places

throughout the world already

now without pollinators the human race

and all of earth’s ecosystems

wouldn’t survive around the world

pollinators are declining

loss of habitat is the main reason

followed by improper use of pesticides

pollution and invasive species

pollinators and plants have a really

special relationship

and neither can exist in isolation

now when you think of pollinators raise

your hand

whose first thought was a honey bee

that’s what i thought now you’ve

probably already heard that bees have

been struggling around the world due to

a combination of risks

including parasites pathogens pesticides

climate change industrial agriculture

monocultures

and loss of habitat due to urbanization

now the domestication of the species has

now reached the point

where these little bees depend on humans

just for their survival

now the honeybees get a lot of the

credit but they’re actually not

the only ones that are doing all the

hard work we have way more creatures

than just the honey bee that pollinate

the plants here in new zealand

but because they don’t produce honey a

lot of them often get ignored

we have over 28 species

of native new zealand bees and unlike

the honey bee

most of them are solitary and they’ll

nest in the ground

we also have a ray of birds bats

lizards skinks butterflies moths flies

beetles and other insects that all

pollinate the plants that we need to

survive

but many of these species are struggling

according to the latest ministry of the

environment report

almost two-thirds of our rare ecosystems

are threatened

and thousands of individual species are

now

at risk of extinction that’s

74 of our birds

84 of our reptiles

and 80 of our bats

with insect numbers still mostly unknown

now we need to be doing everything that

we can to turn these numbers around

before it’s too late because this isn’t

the future that we want to be growing up

in

now over half of the world’s population

are thought to be living in an urban

area

but this figure is set to rise by over

two-thirds by 2050.

now the expansion and intensification of

these urban areas

is resulting in the loss of our soft

landscape areas

which in turn is resulting in the loss

of crucial pollinator habitat

so growing food is known for shaping our

countryside right

we have these large-scale industrial

farms that often specialize in producing

one or two crops and selling them

directly to the supermarkets

this idyllic countryside landscape is

often where we imagine all of our

pollinators to just

run away and hide we don’t need bugs in

the city

right well actually it’s these places

that they’re struggling

research has shown that in these

high-intensity agricultural

areas our native bee populations

declined by

90 percent and some species just

disappeared entirely

but the good news is as these species

are actually flourishing

in the lower intensity sites like our

community garden

which means that by welcoming them into

our cities

we might actually have a chance of

saving them

so growing food is gaining a lot more

prominence within

cities and it’s simple we need to be

growing our food where the people

are so locally grown food is helping to

reduce the impact of climate change

by reducing food miles and co2 emissions

now every little bit is important from

our larger community gardens

to just growing a few things on your

balcony

but without pollinators there to

pollinate these things

these places are going to struggle

because we know that the health

and resilience of our native and our

agricultural systems

depends on biodiversity so we need to

have a wide range of pollinators

to sustainably feed our growing nation

so my goal is to connect up key habitat

patches

such as parks and urban agriculture hubs

using vegetated corridors to provide a

place for pollinators to live

breed travel and forage

pollinators don’t really care about

property boundaries like we have to

so we form pollinator paths by

connecting together both public

and private land so that includes our

open spaces our parks our reserves

streams town squares nature play areas

playgrounds and our sports field edges

this can then connect up with a series

of green roofs

and living walls this would then link

together with our community gardens

our city farms and our urban

agricultural hubs

it would then be strengthened by the

planting that people do

in their own back gardens

and then it would be linked by what we

do with our transport corridors

so on our grass berms and verges and our

streetscapes

and our public transport network along

our walking and cycling paths

and along our highways to create a

network of paths

that runs throughout our city

so the major obstacles and urban areas

for our pollinators are our transport

corridors

our parking rots and our buildings so we

need to be looking at really

space efficient ways of linking this

habitat within our densest urban areas

so our cities are like a big jigsaw

puzzle of green spaces

every park and every pathway is an

important piece

of that puzzle so

why a pathway why does it even need to

be connected

you see all pollinators can travel at

different distances

so we need to be designing to the lowest

common denominator

and that’s this guy our skinks and our

lizards

and our non-flying insects you see the

birds and bees can fly for

miles to find food but these lizards can

only run

really short distances between patches

of vegetation

to avoid the predators so we’re starting

to look into the plausibility

of special crossings beneath our roads

for our reptile friends

now this is me when i was a kid i was

known

as the bug girl i absolutely

loved bugs so much and i was always that

kid

that was in class while all the other

children and teachers were screaming

about the big scary spider in the corner

i was the one going to save the day and

i always wanted to save the world

but i kind of wanted it to be a bit

bigger than that

but i was also diagnosed with a pretty

debilitating medical

medical condition which i fought

throughout my teenage years

there were many times that i actually

thought i wasn’t going to make it

but battling it really gave me this

sense of urgency

that if i was going to play a part in

helping to save the world

then i really had to get on with it

so after completing my degree in

landscape architecture

at age 22 i set about my mission to

create new zealand’s first pollinator

path

so this path it runs one and a half

kilometers through greyline

and which is a suburb on the edge of

auckland city centre

it connects up a sports park and a large

reserve

with a local urban agriculture hub

so this is the first prototype path

along the path

so this installation was put in in 2016

and we had a whole range of different

stakeholders from local community groups

to neighbours to local businesses

and we planted a whole array of

different plants that all flower at

different times throughout the year

we also installed bumblebee and

leafcutter bee boxes

we built a cascading masonry wall that

we filled with different habitat

materials

and we made sure that there was lots of

ground covers leaf litter sticks and

logs for the pollinators to be able to

hide in

this is a photo from our opening day

we had over a hundred people come to

this really little park

and this was really humbling because

it’s easy to forget what’s important as

we go about our busy

often insulated lives but this really

reminded me that people

do care and they do want change and if

we all work together

we can actually achieve some pretty cool

things

so this one is the second part that

we’ve installed along the pathway

so we worked with the kalmana gardens

and the local community to create a

communal welcoming area

for both people and pollinators alike

now the following installations are

going to be completed on one massive

event day next year

with a collection of businesses schools

and community groups

sponsoring creating and maintaining each

section of this pathway

and this will include a pollinator art

installation which will be done by the

local school

where they’ll grow and create a living

artwork made of wild flowers

this installation will also have exposed

sections of clay for the native bees

we will also have a hub for our

butterfly pollinators

which will contain an array of different

host plants that they need

we will be installing a range of

different habitat boxes for birds and

bats and bees and we’ll be installing

some pollinator walls and educational

murals

that include a range of different

habitat materials and plants in a

modular

space-saving arrangement

we will then be planting out all of the

grass verges

and the park edges along the pathway

now currently there’s a real lack of

data so we have had to use the

philosophy

i’ve built it and the pollinators will

come

but the next stage i really want to get

some research grants and sponsorships so

that we can get ecologists

testing and monitoring these sites to

see how many more pollinators are using

them

and then we want to connect and continue

this network

throughout the city now we have so many

collaborations planned

with a range of local businesses and

community groups

and i’ve been contacted by passionate

people throughout new zealand’s major

cities

and even internationally to set up these

networks and as word spreads across the

country

other cities will be able to adopt the

framework and the guidelines that we’ve

been creating

well i really hope that this inspires

you to connect with your community

and to go outside into your garden onto

your berm

maybe to your local school or to your

park and just start to reimagine how you

might be able to reshape this space just

a little bit

to make it just a bit more welcoming to

our pollinator pals

it could really be as simple as planting

some more flowers that flower at

different times of the year

and using natives as much as possible

it’s always good to leave your garden

just a little bit messy you know keep

those fallen leaves and dead branches so

that the pollinators have somewhere to

hide

you could put out a tray of water with

stones in it that way insects have a

place to drink

that they won’t drown in and you can

stop using pesticides in your garden

and tell your local council that you

want to have a spray-free neighborhood

you could leave a patch of exposed soil

for the ground nesting bees

or you could even make your own

pollinator wall or insect hotel with the

kids

let’s start producing our food more

locally and increasing this in connected

habitat

for the pollinators to help create the

future that we want to see

in the world because pollination

really is the pathway to making

healthier

more productive cities thank you

[Applause]

you

[音乐]

想象一个

没有传粉者的世界 一个我们

必须使用油漆刷

在植物之间转移花粉

的世界 这已经开始在世界各地发生,

现在没有传粉者,人类

和地球上的所有生态系统

都无法在地球周围生存 世界

传粉者正在减少

栖息地丧失是主要原因

农药使用不当

污染和入侵物种

传粉者和植物有着非常

特殊的关系

,现在两者都不能孤立存在

当你想到传粉者时

请举手

首先想到的是蜂蜜 蜜蜂

这就是我现在的想法你

可能已经听说蜜蜂

在世界各地挣扎,原因

包括寄生虫病原体杀虫剂

气候变化工业化农业

单一栽培

和由于城市化导致的栖息地丧失

现在该物种的驯化

现在已经 达到了

这些小蜜蜂依赖人类的地步

只是为了它们的生存,

现在蜜蜂得到了很多赞誉,

但实际上它们

并不是唯一

付出所有努力的人,我们拥有的生物

不仅仅是为新西兰的植物授粉的蜜蜂,

而是因为它们 不要生产蜂蜜

很多它们经常被忽视

我们有超过 28

种新西兰本土蜜蜂,与蜜蜂不同

,它们中的大多数是孤独的,它们会

在地下筑巢

我们还有一束鸟 蝙蝠

蜥蜴 石龙子 蝴蝶、飞蛾、

甲虫和其他昆虫,它们都

为我们生存所需的植物授粉,

但根据环境部的最新报告,这些物种中的许多物种都在苦苦挣扎

,我们近三分之二的稀有生态系统

受到威胁

,数千个物种

现在正

我们的 74 只鸟类

84 只爬行动物

和 80 只蝙蝠

面临灭绝的危险

现在我们需要尽

我们所能扭转昆虫的数量 这些数字在

为时已晚之前出现,因为这不是

我们想要成长的未来

现在世界上超过一半的人口

被认为生活在城市

地区,

但这个数字将上升超过

三分之二 到 2050 年。

现在,这些城市地区的扩张和集约化

正在导致我们软景观区域的丧失,

这反过来又导致

重要的传粉媒介栖息地的丧失,

因此种植粮食以塑造我们的乡村而闻名,

我们拥有这些大规模 工业化

农场通常专门生产

一种或两种作物并将它们

直接出售给超市

这个田园诗般的乡村景观

通常是我们想象所有

传粉者

逃跑并隐藏的地方我们不需要

城市中的虫子

实际上它是 这些

他们正在苦苦挣扎的地方

研究表明,在这些

高强度农业

区,我们的本土蜜蜂数量

减少了

90%,一些物种甚至 t

完全消失了,

但好消息是这些

物种实际上

在我们的社区花园等密度较低的地方繁衍生息,

这意味着通过欢迎它们进入

我们的城市,

我们实际上可能有机会

拯救它们,

因此种植粮食正变得更加

突出 在

城市内,这很简单,我们需要

当地种植食物的地方种植食物

通过减少食物里程和二氧化碳排放量来帮助减少气候变化的影响

现在,从

我们更大的社区花园

到只是种植,每一点都很重要 阳台上有一些东西,

但那里没有传粉者为

这些东西授粉,

这些地方将陷入困境,

因为我们知道

我们的本地人和农业系统的健康和复原力

取决于生物多样性,因此我们需要

拥有广泛的传粉者

才能可持续地 养活我们成长中的国家,

所以我的目标是连接

公园和城市农业等关键栖息地

使用植被走廊

为传粉者提供栖息地

繁殖旅行和觅食

传粉者并不

像我们必须的那样真正关心财产边界,

因此我们通过将公共和私人土地连接在一起来形成传粉者路径,

从而包括我们的

开放空间 公园 我们的保护区

溪流 城镇广场 自然游乐区

操场和我们的运动场边缘

这可以与

一系列绿色屋顶

和生活墙连接起来 这将

与我们的社区花园

我们的城市农场和我们的城市

农业中心连接

起来

人们

在他们自己的后花园里种植的植物加强了

它,然后它

与我们的交通

走廊联系起来,比如我们的草堤和边缘,我们的街景

和我们的公共交通网络,沿着

我们的步行和自行车道

,沿着我们的 高速公路创建

一个贯穿我们城市的路径网络,

因此主要障碍和城市

区域 你的传粉者是我们的交通

走廊,

我们的停车场和我们的建筑物,所以我们

需要寻找真正

节省空间的方式,

在我们最密集的城市区域内连接这个栖息地,

所以我们的城市就像一个

绿色空间的大拼图,

每个公园和每条道路都是

这个难题的一个重要部分 那么

为什么一条路径为什么甚至

需要连接

你看到所有传粉者都可以在

不同的距离上传播

所以我们需要设计到最小的

公分母这就是我们的石龙子和

蜥蜴

和我们的非 - 你看到的飞行昆虫

鸟类和蜜蜂可以飞行数

英里来寻找食物,但这些蜥蜴只能

在植被斑块之间跑很短的距离

以避开掠食者,因此我们

开始研究

道路下方特殊交叉口的合理

性 我们的爬行动物朋友

现在这就是我小时候我被

称为虫女孩我

非常喜欢虫子而且我一直是那个

孩子 上课时所有其他

孩子和老师都

在为角落里的大可怕蜘蛛尖叫

我是要拯救世界的人,

我一直想拯救世界,

但我有点希望它

比那大一点,

但我 还被诊断出患有相当

衰弱的

医疗状况,我在

整个青少年时期

都在与这种疾病

作斗争

帮助拯救世界的过程中,

我真的不得不继续前进,

所以在 22 岁完成景观建筑学位后,

我开始着手

创建新西兰的第一条传粉媒介

路径,这条路径长达一

公里半 穿过灰线

,这是奥克兰市中心边缘的郊区,

它将一个体育公园和一个大型

保护区

与当地的城市农业中心连接起来,

因此这是该路径上的第一条原型路径

所以这个装置是在 2016 年安装的

,我们有一系列不同的

利益相关者,从当地社区团体

到邻居再到当地企业

,我们种植了一系列

不同的植物,它们在一年中的不同时间开花,

我们还安装了大黄蜂和

切叶机 蜂箱

我们建造了一堵层叠的砖石墙

,里面填满了不同的栖息地

材料

,我们确保有很多

地面覆盖的落叶棒和

原木,让传粉者能够

藏在里面

这是我们开业当天的照片

一百多人来到

这个非常小的公园

,这真的很令人羞愧,因为

我们很容易忘记什么是重要的,因为

我们忙碌而

经常被隔离的生活,但这真的

提醒我人们

确实关心并且他们确实想要改变,如果

我们都工作

我们实际上可以一起完成一些非常酷的

事情,

所以这是我们沿着路径安装的第二部分,

所以我们很聪明 h 卡尔马纳花园

和当地社区为人们和传粉者创造一个

公共欢迎区

现在以下设施

将在明年的一个大型

活动日完成

,由商学院

和社区团体

赞助创建和维护每个

这条路径的一部分

,这将包括一个传粉媒介艺术

装置,将由

当地学校完成

,他们将在那里种植并创造一个

由野花制成的活生生的艺术品。

这个装置还将

为本地蜜蜂提供暴露的粘土部分,

我们还将 为我们的蝴蝶传粉者提供一个中心,

其中将包含他们需要的一系列不同的

寄主植物

我们

将为鸟类、蝙蝠和蜜蜂安装一系列不同的栖息地盒

,我们将安装

一些传粉者墙和教育

壁画

,其中包括 一系列不同的

栖息地材料和植物,在一个

模块化

的节省空间的安排中,

我们将 沿着小路种植所有的

草地

边缘和公园边缘,

目前真的缺乏

数据,所以我们不得不使用

我建立的理念,传粉者会

来,

但下一阶段我真的想得到

一些 研究补助金和赞助,

以便我们可以让生态学家

测试和监测这些地点,

看看有多少授粉者在使用

它们

,然后我们希望在整个城市连接并继续

这个网络

,现在我们

计划

与一系列当地企业进行如此多的合作 和

社区团体

,我已经与

新西兰主要

城市

甚至国际上充满热情的人们联系,以建立这些

网络,随着消息在全国范围内传播,

其他城市将能够

采用我们一直在创建的框架和指导方针

好吧,我真的希望这能激发

您与社区建立联系,

并到户外进入您的花园到

您的护堤上,

也许到您当地的地方 学校或

公园,然后开始重新构想

如何能够稍微重塑这个空间

,使其对

我们的传粉者朋友更加欢迎

它真的可以像种植

更多开花

不同的花朵一样简单 一年

中的某些时候,尽可能多地使用当地人

,让你的花园有点乱总是好的,

你知道保留

那些落叶和枯枝,

这样传粉者就有地方

躲起来

你可以用石头放一盘水

这样昆虫就有

了喝水的地方

,它们不会淹死,你可以

停止在你的花园里使用杀虫剂,

并告诉你的地方议会你

想要一个没有喷雾的社区,

你可以留下一块裸露的

土壤 地面筑巢蜜蜂,

或者您甚至可以与孩子们一起建造自己的

传粉者墙或昆虫旅馆

elp 创造了

我们希望在世界上看到的未来,

因为授粉

确实是让城市变得

更健康、

更有生产力的途径谢谢你们

[掌声]

你们