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Estimating the stormwater attenuation benefits derived from planting four monoculture species of deciduous trees on vacant and underutilized urban land parcels
Authors:MC Kirnbauer  BW Baetz  WA Kenney
Institution:1. School of Engineering, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada N1G 2W1;2. Department of Civil Engineering, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada L8S 4K1;3. Faculty of Forestry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 1A1;1. Department of Work Science, Business Economics and Environmental Psychology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, P.O. Box 88, SE-230 53 Alnarp, Sweden;2. Department of Health Sciences, Lund University, P.O. Box 157, 221 00 Lund, Sweden;1. School of Environment and Development, University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, United Kingdom;2. Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PT, United Kingdom;1. Ecology Department, Institute of Biology and Biochemistry, Maria Curie-Sk?odowska University, Akademicka 19, 20-033 Lublin, Poland;2. State School of Higher Education in Che?m, Pocztowa 54, 22-100 Che?m, Poland;3. Department of Botany, Institute of Biology, University of Bialystok, ?wierkowa 20B, 15-950 Bia?ystok, Poland;4. Wildlife Society “Stork”, Radomska 22/32, 02-323 Warszawa, Poland;5. Department of Zoology, University of Rzeszów, Zelwerowicza 4, 35-601 Rzeszów, Poland;1. Laboratory of Floriculture and Landscape Architecture, Department of Crop Science, Agricultural University of Athens, 75, Iera Odos, 118 55 Athens, Greece;2. Division of Water Resources Management, Department of Natural Resources Management & Agricultural Engineering, Agricultural University of Athens, 75, Iera Odos, 118 55 Athens, Greece;1. School of Ecosystem and Forest Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Burnley, VIC, 3121, Australia;2. School of Earth, Atmosphere, and Environment, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, 3800, Australia
Abstract:This paper presents research that was undertaken to determine whether planting deciduous trees, using intensive tree planting schemes, on vacant and underutilized urban land provides significant hydrologic benefits. This work contributes to an ongoing discussion on how to use vacant and underutilized land productively, and may be important to land use decision-makers, whose policies support the use of green infrastructure for stormwater management. Tree growth parameters for four monoculture planting schemes were modeled (all trees had a 50.8 mm caliper at planting) and included (i) 450 Ginkgo biloba, (ii) 92 Platanus × acerifolia, (iii) 120 Acer saccharinum, and (iv) 434 Liquidambar styraciflua, on a 1.6-acre parcel. i-Tree Hydro (formerly UFORE-Hydro) was used to derive a simplified Microsoft Excel-based water balance model to quantify the canopy interception potential and evaporation, based on 7 years (2002–2008) of historical hourly rainfall and mean temperature data in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. This study revealed that three of the species responded similarly, while one species (L. styraciflua) performed significantly better with respect to total canopy storage potential and evaporation, capturing and evaporating 2.9 m3/tree over the 7 years analyzed, or 1280 m3 for the total tree stand of 434 trees. The analyses presented herein demonstrate that the tree canopy layer was able to intercept and evaporate approximately 6.5%–11% of the total rainfall that falls onto the crown across the 7 years studied, for the G. biloba, P. × acerifolia and A. saccharinum tree stands and 17%–27% for the L. styraciflua tree stand. This study revealed that the rate at which a species grows, the leaf area index of the species as it matures, and the total number of trees to be planted need to be determined to truly understand the behavior and potential benefits of different planting schemes; had the mature leaf area been used as the sole indicator of the stormwater attenuating potential for each species, the A. saccharinum would have been the selected species. Also, had attenuation and evaporation per unit of tree been the only measurement reported, the P. × acerifolia stand would have been deemed the best performing tree, attenuating and evaporating 8.1 m3/tree. While the actual values presented herein may be uncertain because of a lack of locally-derived tree growth models, the approach described warrants further investigation.
Keywords:Hydrologic benefits  Stormwater attenuation  Urban forestry  Vacant and underutilized land
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