| Literature DB >> 25797683 |
Zheming Tong1, Thomas H Whitlow2, Patrick F MacRae3, Andrew J Landers4, Yoshiki Harada3.
Abstract
Many reports of trees' impacts on urban air quality neglect pattern and process at the landscape scale. Here, we describe brief campaigns to quantify the effect of trees on the dispersion of airborne particulates using high time resolution measurements along short transects away from roads. Campaigns near major highways in Queens, NY showed frequent, stochastic spikes in PM2.5. The polydisperse PM2.5 class poorly represented the behavior of discrete classes. A transect across a lawn with trees had fewer spikes in PM2.5 concentration but decreased more gradually than a transect crossing a treeless lawn. This coincided with decreased Turbulence Kinetic Energy downwind of trees, indicating recirculation, longer residence times and decreased dispersion. Simply planting trees can increase local pollution concentrations, which is a special concern if the intent is to protect vulnerable populations. Emphasizing deposition to leaf surfaces obscures the dominant impact of aerodynamics on local concentration.Entities:
Keywords: Aerodynamics; Dispersion; Near-road air pollution; PM(2.5); Trees
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25797683 DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2015.02.026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Pollut ISSN: 0269-7491 Impact factor: 8.071