4.5 Article

Investigating potential hydrological ecosystem services in urban gardens through soil amendment experiments and hydrologic models

期刊

URBAN ECOSYSTEMS
卷 25, 期 3, 页码 867-878

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11252-021-01191-7

关键词

Urban agriculture; Urban heat island; Infiltration

资金

  1. National Science Foundation CAREER award [1651361]
  2. Direct For Biological Sciences
  3. Division Of Environmental Biology [1651361] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Urban greenspaces provide important ecosystem services, such as stormwater retention and infiltration, as well as enhanced evapotranspiration, which help mitigate urban flooding and heat island effects. This study focused on urban gardens and found that soil amendments can influence water retention, with high levels of organic matter promoting infiltration and water holding capacity. The results suggest that urban gardens have the potential to provide underappreciated hydrologic ecosystem services.
Among the ecosystem services provided by urban greenspace are the retention and infiltration of stormwater, which decreases urban flooding, and enhanced evapotranspiration, which helps mitigate urban heat island effects. Some types of urban greenspace, such as rain gardens and green roofs, are intentionally designed to enhance these hydrologic functions. Urban gardens, while primarily designed for food production and aesthetic benefits, may have similar hydrologic function, due to high levels of soil organic matter that promote infiltration and water holding capacity. We quantified leachate and soil moisture from experimental urban garden plots receiving various soil amendments (high and low levels of manure and municipal compost, synthetic fertilizer, and no inputs) over three years. Soil moisture varied across treatments, with highest mean levels observed in plots receiving manure compost, and lowest in plots receiving synthetic fertilizer. Soil amendment treatments explained little of the variation in weekly leachate volume, but among treatments, high municipal compost and synthetic fertilizer had lowest leachate volumes, and high and low manure compost had slightly higher mean leachate volumes. We used these data to parameterize a simple mass balance hydrologic model, focusing on high input municipal compost and no compost garden plots, as well as reference turfgrass plots. We ran the model for three growing seasons under ambient precipitation and three elevated precipitation scenarios. Garden plots received 12-16% greater total water inputs compared to turfgrass plots because of irrigation, but leachate totals were 20-30% lower for garden plots across climate scenarios, due to elevated evapotranspiration, which was 50-60% higher in garden plots. Within each climate scenario, difference between garden plots which received high levels of municipal compost and garden plots which received no additional compost were small relative to differences between garden plots and turfgrass. Taken together, these results indicate that garden soil amendments can influence water retention, and the high-water retention, infiltration, and evapotranspiration potential of garden soils relative to turfgrass indicates that hydrologic ecosystem services may be an underappreciated benefit of urban gardens.

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