Högåsberget, Gothenburg, Sweden, January 2017
“Liv i död ved,” one of several signs put up by the municipality of Gothenburg in order to inform local residents of the ecological potentiality of “dead” wood. Translated from the Swedish the sign reads: “Life in dead wood. Here, tree trunks have been left to benefit the biodiversity. Many insects, fungi, mosses, and lichens depend on old dying or dead trees for their survival.”
Högåsberget, Gothenburg, Sweden, January 2017
“Liv i död ved,” one of several signs put up by the municipality of Gothenburg in order to inform local residents of the ecological potentiality of “dead” wood. Translated from the Swedish the sign reads: “Life in dead wood. Here, tree trunks have been left to benefit the biodiversity. Many insects, fungi, mosses, and lichens depend on old dying or dead trees for their survival.”