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Urban Forestry Lunch Bunch
Trees & Air Pollution Urban Forestry Lunch Bunch Athens, Georgia Dudley R. Hartel Technology Transfer Specialist SRS-4901 July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution Definitions Processes
Resources (to understand & answer questions) New Research Blame it on turf! July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution Definitions VOCs NOx Ozone SMOG
Biogenic & Anthropogenic July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution VOCs Volatile Organic Compounds Many sources
Evaporate readily (vaporize) Carbon Many sources Vegetation Solvents, paints Vehicle emissions (benzene) July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution VOCs are a Varied Group
Harmful (toxic) to health Benzene, PAH (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons) Not harmful to health Biogenic (NASA study indicates these may reduce airborne molds & bacteria) July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution NOx Emmissions Nitrogen Oxides
Soil, lightning, & volcanoes Human activity (combustion) Cars, trucks, electric generation, industry, gasoline powered lawn equipment Fire (i.e. prescribed burning) Heavily fertilized agricultural crops (corn, cotton, wheat) July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution Ozone O3 (3 atoms of Oxygen are combined)
Troposphere (up to 10 miles) Stratosphere ( miles) July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution Ozone
Ozone has the same chemical structure whether it occurs high above the earth or at ground level and can be good or bad, depending on its location in the atmosphere. Ozone: Good Up High, Bad Nearby Protects life on earth from the sun’s harmful ultraviolet rays (UV-b) Creates health problems July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution SMOG Historically: Current:
Industrial SMOG (London 1950s) Smoke + Fog Current: Photochemical SMOG Non-smoke producing combustion NOx & VOCs + Sunlight (Ozone) July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution Biogenic Anthropogenic
Produced by living organisms or biological processes Trees (woody plants) Grass (herbaceous plants) Soil Anthropogenic Human activity (related to use of fossil fuels) July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution Pollution Process (requirements) Sunlight
Oxides of nitrogen (NOx) Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) Temperatures >18 degrees Celsius (64.4F) July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution Trees & VOC Emmisions1 Species Isoprene
Monoterpene Acer negundo 0.0 0.2 Cedrus deodara 0.4 Quercus alba 0.5 0.1 Quercus rubra 0.9 Pinus taeda 1.4 Pistacia chinensis 2.4 1grams/tree/day Benjamin & Winer 1998 July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution Two VOC Emission Issues
Individual species & trees Benjamin & Winer Landscape level (regional) for air pollution studies Guenther & Geron July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution Trees & VOC Emmisions YES! Trees Emit VOCs
Terpenes Isoprene (oak) & monoterpene (pine) YES! Trees Emit VOCs VOCs are not pollutants VOCs + NOx + Sunlight = Problem July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution Resources GHASP Researchers
Galveston-Houston Association for Smog Prevention Trees & Our Air, 1999 Researchers Chris Geron & Alex Guenther Nat’l Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO Michael T. Benjamin & Arthur M. Winer School of Public Health, UCLA David J. Nowak USDA FS, Syracuse, NY July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution New Research & Questions
VOC emissions: 2-28x higher than previously recorded (methodology, lab vs. field) for trees May not be dependent on age of tree Canopy level may not be important Considerable variability reported More research needed July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution Despite Uncertainty in VOC Data Trees:
Do not create pollution! Have a positive effect on UHI Evaporative cooling Shade Cooler temps mean less ozone, less AC Remove particulates & CO2 Reduce runoff & erosion Have a positive impact on mental health July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution Suburban Lawns!
Recent research in Australia (Kirstine) Grass & cut grass are important sources of VOC emissions Estimate that about 1/3 of photochemically reactive VOCs in an urban airshed are from grass & grass cutting These emissions should be part of models July 8, 2003
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Trees & Air Pollution Suburban Lawns! Unlike trees, turf does not:
Provide as much evaporative cooling Provide shade (for humans) Reduce energy demand Provide an equivalent (any) pervious surface Provide mental health benefits (no research) July 8, 2003
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