AI Article Synopsis

  • Climate change is increasing the need for urban greening, as trees provide environmental benefits and enhance human well-being by mitigating urban heat.
  • Urban trees in Tacoma, Washington were found to significantly lower summer air temperatures near sidewalks, with areas lacking tree cover experiencing much higher temperatures.
  • Increasing tree cover is crucial for cooling urban areas and improving climate resilience, emphasizing the importance of protecting existing trees and planting more in city environments.

Article Abstract

Climate change is exacerbating the need for urban greening and the associated environmental and human well-being benefits. Trees can help mitigate urban heat, but more detailed understanding of cooling effects of green infrastructure are needed to guide management decisions and deploy trees as effective and equitable climate adaptation infrastructure. We investigated how urban trees affect summer air temperature along sidewalks within a neighborhood of Tacoma, Washington, USA, and to what extent urban trees reduce risks of high summer temperatures (i.e., the levels regulated by state outdoor heat exposure rules intended to reduce heat-related illnesses). Air temperature varied by 2.57 °C, on average, across our study area, and the probability of daytime temperatures exceeding regulated high temperature thresholds was up to five times greater in locations with no canopy cover within 10 m compared to those with 100% cover. Air temperatures decreased linearly with increasing cover within 10 m, suggesting that every unit of added tree cover can help cool the air. Our findings highlight the value of trees in mitigating urban heat, especially given expected warming with climate change. Protecting existing urban trees and increasing tree cover (e.g., by planting street trees), are important actions to enhance climate change resilience of urban areas.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10864265PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-51921-yDOI Listing

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