4.5 Article

Environmental and crown related factors affecting street tree transpiration in Helsinki, Finland

Journal

URBAN ECOSYSTEMS
Volume 19, Issue 4, Pages 1693-1715

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11252-016-0561-1

Keywords

Evapotranspiration; Street trees; Urban; Water use

Funding

  1. Maj and Tor Nessling Foundation
  2. Niemi foundation
  3. Academy of Finland [138328]
  4. Academy of Finland (ICOS - Finland) [263149]
  5. Academy of Finland Centre of Excellence [272041]
  6. Nordic Centre of Excellence DEFROST
  7. Academy of Finland (AKA) [138328, 138328] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

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We investigated the drivers of street tree transpiration in boreal conditions, in order to better understand tree water use in the context of urban tree planning and stormwater management. Two streets built in Helsinki in 2002, hemiboreal zone that had been planted either with Tilia x vulgaris or Alnus glutinosa f. pyramidalis were used as the study sites. Tree water use was measured from sap flow over the 2008-2011 period by the heat dissipation method. Penman-Monteith based evapotranspiration models of increasing complexity were tested against the tree water use measurements to assess the role of environmental and tree related factors in tree transpiration. Alnus and Tilia respectively used 1.1 and 0.8 l of water per m(2) of leaf area per day under ample water conditions, but the annual variation was high. The Penman-Monteith evapotranspiration estimate and soil water status changes explained over 80 % of the variation in tree transpiration when the model was parameterized annually. The addition of tree crown surface area in the model improved its accuracy and diminished variation between years and sites. Using single parameterization over all four years instead of annually varying one did not produce reliable estimates of tree transpiration. Tree transpiration, scaled to different canopy cover percentages, implied that the columnar Alnus trees could transpire as much as all annual rainfall at or less than 50 % canopy cover.

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