Abstract

With increasing urbanisation there is concern regarding loss of experience and knowledge of biodiversity amongst urban populations. Yet biodiversity representations are retained in many art and functional forms, including names of places, buildings, institutions and streets. These manifestations offer a window to examine the relationship between humans and their experienced or imagined environment using a biocultural lens. I quantified the current prevalence of urban streets named after animals or plant species, the diversity of species represented, whether they are native or non-native, whether representative of the biome in which the town was situated and the change in prevalence through time. The street names of 48 towns in a one degree wide south-north belt across seven of South African’s biomes were captured and analysed. Of the 4,359 street names, 11.1% were named after plants (218 species) and 5.3% after animals (131 species), although some towns had none and others more than 40%. Approximately half of the plants were native to South Africa, whereas over 80% of the animals were. There was no correspondence between the species composition reflected in street names and the biome in which towns were located. The proportion of streets named after plants or animals has generally increased over the last two hundred years. These results provide insights into the bioculturally defined plants and animals that are valued by past and present urban communities, showing that they are generally from a wider array than can be found or experienced in the local setting.

Highlights

  • Street names fulfil a number of functions, the most obvious one being to assist in navigation or identification of a specific location

  • In examining the prevalence and nature of biodiversity street names it is useful to first understand how street names are currently given in South Africa

  • There was no relationship indicated from the regression of the proportion of plant and animal street names within towns (r = 0.084; F = 0.324; df = 1, 46)

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Summary

Introduction

Street names fulfil a number of functions, the most obvious one being to assist in navigation or identification of a specific location. Street names are commonly a means of commemorating specific events or individuals, which help promote historical figures or noteworthy events in public consciousness on a daily basis. Who or what is commemorated is a social and frequently political decision [1,2,3]. Street names may be used to differentiate communities or sections of towns and cities for social, political or financial purposes [1,3]. The meaning of many street names diminishes with time, with current generations no longer

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