urban-heat-and-ecosystem-services
Urban heat and ecosystem services research examines how plants in city environments mitigate the heat island effect through processes such as shading, evapotranspiration, and surface cooling. Understanding these mechanisms is critical for plant science because it informs how vegetation physiology, species selection, and green infrastructure design can be optimized to maximize thermal regulation benefits in increasingly warming urban landscapes.
Urban Tree Canopy Reduces Heat-Related Mortality by 39% in European Cities
Trees in your local park or street aren't just pretty — they are literally keeping people alive d...
Seagrass Meadows Sequester Carbon 35x Faster Than Tropical Rainfore...
Ocean floors near coastlines may be doing more to slow climate change than the forests we've been...
Phosphorus Recovery from Wastewater Using Constructed Wetlands with...
It means the phosphorus that would otherwise pollute your local waterways could instead end up ba...
Mangrove Restoration Cost-Effectiveness Exceeds Engineered Coastal ...
Trees and wetlands near coastlines — the same kinds of natural buffers that protect beaches, fish...