n keeping with its reputation as the "Garden
City", Singapore is awash with lush gardens and parklands
as tropical greenery carpets the landscape. Innumerable trees
and flowering shrubs line the expressways and colourful plants
hang from balconies and overhead bridges.
The Singapore Botanic Gardens epitomises the tropical island's
luxuriant parks - a combination of primary jungle and elegantly
laid out flowerbeds and shrubs. Spread over 52 hectares, the
gardens hold about 4,000 species of plant life, many rare
specimens amongst them.
Singapore is one of only two cities in the world to have
a significant area of primary rainforest within its boundaries.
The 164-hectare Bukit Timah Nature Reserve - just 12 kilometres
from the city centre - contains more species of flora than
the entire North American continent.
There are dozens of other gardens and reserves in Singapore,
among them the Chinese Garden and Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve,
Singapore's first designated wetland nature reserve and
a major stopping-off point for migrating birds during the
months from September to March.
The main Parks
and Nature Reserves are stated below, click on the following
to know about them in detail:
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