The impact of pruning and mortality on urban tree canopy volume

被引:16
|
作者
Speak, Andrew Francis [1 ]
Salbitano, Fabio [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Florence, Dept Forestry, Florence, Italy
关键词
Urban forest; Forestry maintenance; Urban tree biomass; Ecosystem services; Tree pruning; RAINFALL INTERCEPTION; FUNCTIONAL TRAITS; CARBON STORAGE; AIR-POLLUTION; FORESTS; BIOMASS; STEM;
D O I
10.1016/j.ufug.2022.127810
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Urban trees provide a wide range of ecosystem services for city residents, with tall, mature trees with wide crowns generally regarded as preferable. The tree biomass which is responsible for shading, pollution removal, rain runoff retention etc. gets periodically reduced by the municipal tree management practice of pruning. This is a necessary activity, which reduces the risk of infrastructure damage and falling branches, but many estimates of ecosystem service provision in cities do not consider its impact explicitly. Tree mortality is also higher in cities, preventing trees from attaining and remaining at large sizes. This study used extensive field measurements of tree structure to estimate the impact of pruning on 8 tree species in two Italian cities: Taranto and Florence. Crown widths were reduced by 1.6 m on average, however there is large variation between species variation with branches more often being removed for thinning crowns resulting in larger gap fractions, which increased by 15% on average. No significant differences were observed for crown widths or gap fraction between trees pruned 3 and 4 years previously, suggesting that tree crowns structurally recover from pruning after 3 years. A deterministic model revealed that current urban forest pruning rates (every 6 years) and mortality (1%) may create a situation in which a city dominated by the species studied benefits from 93.5% of the maximum ecosystem services possible. This work will allow more nuanced estimates of urban forest services to be calculated.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Structural Pruning and Root Remediation: Tools for Building Sustainable Urban Tree Canopy
    Orfanedes, Michael S.
    Hoyt, C. Way
    Gilman, Edward F.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE FLORIDA STATE HORTICULTURE SOCIETY, VOL 122, 2009, 122 : 390 - 393
  • [2] Quantifying the stormwater runoff volume reduction benefits of urban street tree canopy
    Selbig, William R.
    Loheide, Steven P., II
    Shuster, William
    Scharenbroch, Bryant C.
    Coville, Robert C.
    Kruegler, James
    Avery, William
    Haefner, Ralph
    Nowak, David
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2022, 806
  • [3] ELECTRONIC MEASUREMENT OF TREE CANOPY VOLUME
    GILES, DK
    DELWICHE, MJ
    DODD, RB
    TRANSACTIONS OF THE ASAE, 1988, 31 (01): : 264 - 272
  • [4] Residential urban tree canopy is associated with decreased mortality during tuberculosis treatment in California
    Blount, Robert J.
    Pascopella, Lisa
    Barry, Pennan
    Zabner, Joseph
    Stapleton, Emma M.
    Flood, Jennifer
    Balmes, John
    Nahid, Payam
    Catanzaro, Donald G.
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2020, 711 (711)
  • [5] Spatial configuration and time of day impact the magnitude of urban tree canopy cooling
    Alonzo, Michael
    Baker, Matthew E.
    Gao, Yuemeng
    Shandas, Vivek
    Environmental Research Letters, 2021, 16 (08)
  • [6] Spatial configuration and time of day impact the magnitude of urban tree canopy cooling
    Alonzo, Michael
    Baker, Matthew E.
    Gao, Yuemeng
    Shandas, Vivek
    ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2021, 16 (08):
  • [7] Assessment of the Spatial Variability and Uncertainty of Shreddable Pruning Biomass in an Olive Grove Based on Canopy Volume and Tree Projected Area
    Rodriguez-Lizana, Antonio
    Ramos, Alzira
    Pereira, Maria Joao
    Soares, Amilcar
    Ribeiro, Manuel Castro
    AGRONOMY-BASEL, 2023, 13 (07):
  • [8] Mature Tree Size Expectations in an Urban Canopy
    Sanders, J.
    Grabosky, Jason
    HORTSCIENCE, 2012, 47 (09) : S7 - S7
  • [9] A statewide urban tree canopy mapping method
    Erker, Tedward
    Wang, Lei
    Lorentz, Laura
    Stoltman, Andrew
    Townsend, Philip A.
    REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT, 2019, 229 : 148 - 158
  • [10] INFLUENCE OF PRUNING AT VARIOUS DATES ON PEACH TREE MORTALITY
    PRINCE, VE
    HORTON, BD
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE, 1972, 97 (03) : 303 - &