Abstract

Urban gardening has become increasingly popular, creating green oases in cities; however, many of these activities are undertaken in areas of high traffic density or on ex-brown field sites. As a consequence, there are still some barriers to the adoption of these urban gardening practices for food production. One of the public concerns is the transfer of urban pollutants such as heavy metals into the consumer’s food chain, however, city-wide data is often difficult and expensive to collect. In the citizen science project described herein, we conducted simple citizen-led common collaborative experiments in urban community gardens. These data provided information on the potential risk of heavy metal contaminants and ways in which to mitigate those risks in an urban gardening context. Generally, values were below guideline thresholds, however, at a few garden sites, soil trace metal concentrations (Pb, Cd, Zn) exceeded Austrian recommended limits. Moreover, only at two sites were plant trace metal concentrations shown to be above European food standards limits. Given the citizen’s positive response to the project, we suggest expanding this study to the whole of Vienna, giving newly established gardens a chance to predetermine the risks posed by their local soils.

Highlights

  • The world food supply will need to be doubled by 2050 to cope with the increasing human population [1], creating pressure on limited soil resources [2]

  • A high variability of soil trace metal concentrations was even observed within some garden sites when multiple trials were conducted (Figures 2–4)

  • The results revealed the variability in the trace metal concentrations in soils across the city, and this was reflected in the values of both the spinach and radish samples, as values were significantly different between the garden sites (Table 3)

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Summary

Introduction

The world food supply will need to be doubled by 2050 to cope with the increasing human population [1], creating pressure on limited soil resources [2]. Urban agriculture is booming, fulfilling diverse functions including food production, provision of ecosystem services, community building, reduction in socio-economic tensions and food millage [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]. With production of food in urban areas there will be a tension as a result of the historical legacy or current pollution of the city landscape, often originating from anthropogenic pollution sources such as traffic, industry, domestic combustion or the use of pesticides [12,13,14].

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