One fascinating example was offered to me by Dr Irina Druzhinina, senior mycologist with Kew’s Royal Botanic Gardens, who pointed out how the construction of Britain’s railway network in the 19th and 20th century turbocharged the spread of Serpula lacrymans, better known as dry rot fungus. It is a homeowner’s nightmare, causing millions of pounds of damage to UK homes every year by breaking down the parts of timber that give wood its strength. Druzhinina told me the fungus was spread around the country by the growth of train travel. “As railways expanded, large quantities of untreated or poorly treated timber were used in construction, including sleepers, bridges, and railway buildings. These materials provided an ideal environment for the fungus to spread and proliferate,” she explained. “The movement of infected wood in sleepers or crates inadvertently helped the fungus spread across regions. It is why we now have concrete sleepers all around even though the wood is better for railways.” Differences between cities and the countryside was also a common theme in responses, including a recent paper on differences in body sizes among African dwarf chameleons. The urban heat effect, meaning that towns and cities are usually significantly warmer than surrounding rural areas, also featured a lot. Dr. Barbara Gravendeel, a botanist with Naturalis Biodiversity Center in the Netherlands, pointed to the example of dandelions that grow faster and flower earlier in urban areas. “We collected seeds from common dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) individuals along an urban–rural gradient in Amsterdam to study how these plants evolve in response to urban heat. Urban dandelions grow faster at elevated temperatures and require shorter cold periods to induce flowering, as compared to dandelions from rural populations,” she said. Creeping woodsorrel, another common plant in the northern hemisphere, has redder leaves in urban areas to combat heat stress while keeping greener leaves in cooler rural habitat, Japanese researchers found in 2023. Many researchers said there are are likely thousands more examples around the world waiting to be discovered. If you would like to get involved in finding them, citizen science apps like iNaturalist are a great way to help researchers spot differences across large areas. Happy searching. Read more on biodiversity: |