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Decoupling forest characteristics and background conditions to explain urban-rural variations of multiple microclimate regulation from urban trees

BACKGROUND: Rapid urbanization in semi-arid regions necessitates greater cooling, humidifying, and shading services from urban trees, but maximizing these services requires an exact understanding of their association with forest characteristics and background street and weather conditions. METHODS:...

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Autores principales: Wang, Wenjie, Zhang, Bo, Xiao, Lu, Zhou, Wei, Wang, Huimei, He, Xingyuan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6098947/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30128206
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5450
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author Wang, Wenjie
Zhang, Bo
Xiao, Lu
Zhou, Wei
Wang, Huimei
He, Xingyuan
author_facet Wang, Wenjie
Zhang, Bo
Xiao, Lu
Zhou, Wei
Wang, Huimei
He, Xingyuan
author_sort Wang, Wenjie
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Rapid urbanization in semi-arid regions necessitates greater cooling, humidifying, and shading services from urban trees, but maximizing these services requires an exact understanding of their association with forest characteristics and background street and weather conditions. METHODS: Here, horizontal and vertical air cooling, soil cooling, shading, and humidifying effects were measured for 605 trees from 152 plots in Changchun. Additionally, weather conditions (Tair, relative humidity, and light intensity), forest characteristics (tree height, diameter at breast height (DBH), under-branch height, canopy size, tree density, and taxonomic family of trees) and background conditions (percentage of building, road, green space, water, and building height, building distance to measured trees) were determined for three urban-rural gradients for ring road development, urban settlement history, and forest types. Multiple analysis of variance and regression analysis were used to find the urban-rural changes, while redundancy ordination and variation partitioning were used for decoupling the complex associations among microclimate regulations, forest characteristics, background street and weather conditions. RESULTS: Our results show that horizontal cooling and humidifying differences between canopy shade and full sunshine were <4.5 °C and <9.4%, respectively; while vertical canopy cooling was 1.4 °C, and soil cooling was observed in most cases (peak at 1.4 °C). Pooled urban-rural data analysis showed non-monological changes in all microclimate-regulating parameters, except for a linear increase in light interception by the canopy (r(2) = 0.45) from urban center to rural regions. Together with the microclimate regulating trends, linear increases were observed in tree density, Salicaceae percentage, T(air), light intensity outside forests, tree distance to surrounding buildings, and greenspace percentage. Redundancy ordination demonstrated that weather differences were mainly responsible for the microclimate regulation variation we observed (unique explanatory power, 65.4%), as well as background conditions (12.1%), and forest characteristics (7.7%). DISCUSSION: In general, horizontal cooling, shading, and humidifying effects were stronger in dry, hot, and sunny weather. The effects were stronger in areas with more buildings of relatively lower height, a higher abundance of Ulmaceae, and a lower percentage of Leguminosae and Betulaceae. Larger trees were usually associated with a larger cooling area (a smaller difference per one unit distance from the measured tree). Given uncontrollable weather conditions, our findings highlighted street canyon and forest characteristics that are important in urban microclimate regulation. This paper provides a management strategy for maximizing microclimate regulation using trees, and methodologically supports the uncoupling of the complex association of microclimate regulations in fast urbanization regions.
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spelling pubmed-60989472018-08-20 Decoupling forest characteristics and background conditions to explain urban-rural variations of multiple microclimate regulation from urban trees Wang, Wenjie Zhang, Bo Xiao, Lu Zhou, Wei Wang, Huimei He, Xingyuan PeerJ Environmental Impacts BACKGROUND: Rapid urbanization in semi-arid regions necessitates greater cooling, humidifying, and shading services from urban trees, but maximizing these services requires an exact understanding of their association with forest characteristics and background street and weather conditions. METHODS: Here, horizontal and vertical air cooling, soil cooling, shading, and humidifying effects were measured for 605 trees from 152 plots in Changchun. Additionally, weather conditions (Tair, relative humidity, and light intensity), forest characteristics (tree height, diameter at breast height (DBH), under-branch height, canopy size, tree density, and taxonomic family of trees) and background conditions (percentage of building, road, green space, water, and building height, building distance to measured trees) were determined for three urban-rural gradients for ring road development, urban settlement history, and forest types. Multiple analysis of variance and regression analysis were used to find the urban-rural changes, while redundancy ordination and variation partitioning were used for decoupling the complex associations among microclimate regulations, forest characteristics, background street and weather conditions. RESULTS: Our results show that horizontal cooling and humidifying differences between canopy shade and full sunshine were <4.5 °C and <9.4%, respectively; while vertical canopy cooling was 1.4 °C, and soil cooling was observed in most cases (peak at 1.4 °C). Pooled urban-rural data analysis showed non-monological changes in all microclimate-regulating parameters, except for a linear increase in light interception by the canopy (r(2) = 0.45) from urban center to rural regions. Together with the microclimate regulating trends, linear increases were observed in tree density, Salicaceae percentage, T(air), light intensity outside forests, tree distance to surrounding buildings, and greenspace percentage. Redundancy ordination demonstrated that weather differences were mainly responsible for the microclimate regulation variation we observed (unique explanatory power, 65.4%), as well as background conditions (12.1%), and forest characteristics (7.7%). DISCUSSION: In general, horizontal cooling, shading, and humidifying effects were stronger in dry, hot, and sunny weather. The effects were stronger in areas with more buildings of relatively lower height, a higher abundance of Ulmaceae, and a lower percentage of Leguminosae and Betulaceae. Larger trees were usually associated with a larger cooling area (a smaller difference per one unit distance from the measured tree). Given uncontrollable weather conditions, our findings highlighted street canyon and forest characteristics that are important in urban microclimate regulation. This paper provides a management strategy for maximizing microclimate regulation using trees, and methodologically supports the uncoupling of the complex association of microclimate regulations in fast urbanization regions. PeerJ Inc. 2018-08-16 /pmc/articles/PMC6098947/ /pubmed/30128206 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5450 Text en ©2018 Wang et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Environmental Impacts
Wang, Wenjie
Zhang, Bo
Xiao, Lu
Zhou, Wei
Wang, Huimei
He, Xingyuan
Decoupling forest characteristics and background conditions to explain urban-rural variations of multiple microclimate regulation from urban trees
title Decoupling forest characteristics and background conditions to explain urban-rural variations of multiple microclimate regulation from urban trees
title_full Decoupling forest characteristics and background conditions to explain urban-rural variations of multiple microclimate regulation from urban trees
title_fullStr Decoupling forest characteristics and background conditions to explain urban-rural variations of multiple microclimate regulation from urban trees
title_full_unstemmed Decoupling forest characteristics and background conditions to explain urban-rural variations of multiple microclimate regulation from urban trees
title_short Decoupling forest characteristics and background conditions to explain urban-rural variations of multiple microclimate regulation from urban trees
title_sort decoupling forest characteristics and background conditions to explain urban-rural variations of multiple microclimate regulation from urban trees
topic Environmental Impacts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6098947/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30128206
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5450
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