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Urban Park in Southern Spain is a Biodiversity Hotspot with Allergenic Plants

"Analysis of Spontaneous Plant Species in an Urban Green Space in Southern Spain." — Plant-environment interactions (Hoboken, N.J.), 2026

May 31, 2026by AI Curated

Urban Park in Southern Spain is a Biodiversity Hotspot with Allergenic Plants

What they found

Researchers identified 250 spontaneous plant species across 60 families in La Asomadilla urban park, including two new municipal records and five orchid species. This diverse flora contributes to climate change mitigation and public health benefits.

What they studied

This study conducted a detailed floristic inventory in La Asomadilla urban park, Córdoba, focusing on spontaneous wild flora rather than ornamental species. The aim was to provide local data for urban biodiversity management, considering ecological and public health.

Takeaways

The abstract focuses on findings regarding urban flora; it does not give personal how-to steps for individuals.

About this paper

This study conducted a detailed floristic inventory of spontaneous plant species in La Asomadilla urban park in Córdoba, southern Spain. The research provides novel data at a local level to inform ecological and public health management strategies in Mediterranean urban areas.

biodiversityurban green spacespontaneous floraallergenicityclimate changesouthern spaincurated

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