Abstract

Increasing urban tree cover is an often proposed mitigation strategy against urban heat as trees are expected to cool cities through evapotranspiration and shade provision. However, trees also modify wind flow and urban aerodynamic roughness, which can potentially limit heat dissipation. Existing studies show a varying cooling potential of urban trees in different climates and times of the day. These differences are so far not systematically explained as partitioning the individual tree effects is challenging and impossible through observations alone. Here, we conduct numerical experiments removing and adding radiation, evapotranspiration, and aerodynamic roughness effects caused by urban trees using a mechanistic urban ecohydrological model. Simulations are presented for four cities in different climates (Phoenix, Singapore, Melbourne, Zurich) considering the seasonal and diurnal cycles of air and surface temperatures.Results show that evapotranspiration of well-watered trees alone can decrease local 2 m air temperature at maximum by 3.1– 5.8 °C in the four climates during summer. Further cooling is prevented by stomatal closure at peak temperatures as high vapour pressure deficits limit transpiration. While shading reduces surface temperatures, the interaction of a non-transpiring tree with radiation can increase 2 m air temperature by up to 1.6 – 2.1 °C in certain hours of the day at local scale, thus partially counteracting the evapotranspirative cooling effect. Furthermore, in the analysed scenarios, which do not account for tree wind blockage effects, trees lead to a decrease in urban roughness, which inhibits turbulent energy exchange and increases air temperature during daytime. At night, single tree effects are variable likely due to differences in atmospheric stability within the urban canyon. These results explain reported diurnal, seasonal and climatic differences in the cooling effects of urban trees, and can guide future field campaigns, planning strategies, and species selection aimed at improving local microclimate using urban greenery.

Highlights

  • This is a PDF file of an article that has undergone enhancements after acceptance, such as the addition of a cover page and metadata, and formatting for readability, but it is not yet the definitive version of record

  • We conduct numerical experiments removing and adding radiation, evapotranspiration, and aerodynamic roughness effects caused by urban trees using a mechanistic urban ecohydrological model

  • In the analysed scenarios, which do not account for tree wind blockage effects, trees lead to a decrease in urban roughness, which inhibits turbulent energy exchange and increases air temperature during daytime

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Summary

May 2020 22 December 2020 22 December 2020

We describe the diurnal patterns of canopy layer air and surface temperature o changes caused by trees at the street canyon level, with the aim of disentangling the different r tree effects on urban microclimate, and explain the discrepancies reported in the literature for varying climates and times of the day. We partition the radiation, p evapotranspiration, and roughness effects of urban trees, and quantify their individual and - combined impacts on the 2 m and above tree canopy air temperature, as well as urban surface temperatures by means of numerical experiments run with the recently developed urban e ecohydrological model, Urban Tethys-Chloris (UT&C) (Meili et al, 2020a) in four cities r characterized by distinct climates (Phoenix, USA, Singapore, Singapore, Melbourne, Australia, and Zurich, Switzerland).

Numerical experiments
Mechanistic interpretation of tree-canopy radiation interaction
Urban trees and radiation
Findings
Differences across climates and vegetation selection
Conclusions
Full Text
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