Pollution and Trees, Part III
There's more evidence that “pollution” (this time thermal) benefits trees:
Earlier posts on how trees and pollution go together can be found here and there.City streets can be mean, but somewhere near Brooklyn, a tree grows far better than its country cousins, due to chronically elevated city heat levels, says a new study. The study, just published in the journal Tree Physiology, shows that common native red oak seedlings grow as much as eight times faster in New York’s Central Park than in more rural, cooler settings in the Hudson Valley and Catskill Mountains. Red oaks and their close relatives dominate areas ranging from northern Virginia to southern New England, so the study may have implications for changing climate and forest composition over a wide region.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home