Urban heat island mitigation due to enhanced evapotranspiration in an urban garden in saint paul, minnesota, usa

Gaston Small, Ivan Jimenez, Michael Salzl, Paliza Shrestha

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

As a result of extensive urban development coupled with warming temperatures, urban heat islands (UHI) have become an important factor affecting energy consumption and human health in cities. Prior research has shown that evapotranspiration (ET) from urban vegetation can have a significant cooling effect, but there are relatively few direct measurements from urban vegetable gardens. We compared hourly temperature measurements during two summers (2017 and 2018) in a 750 m2 research garden at the University of St. Thomas (Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA) to hourly temperatures at the nearby Minneapolis-Saint Paul (MSP) International Airport, located 6 km to the south. We also quantified seasonal ET (June-October) in 132 garden plots and five reference turfgrass plots during the summers of 2017 and 2018. For both years, an increase in temperature of 1.00°C at the MSP airport resulted in an average increase of 0.55°C in the research garden. At temperatures greater than 22°C, the garden was cooler on average compared to MSP airport. ET in the garden plots was significantly higher than in the grass reference plots both years, with means of 46 cm for garden plots compared to 19 cm for grass plots in 2017, and 51 cm for garden plots compared to 33 cm for grass plots in 2018. These results are consistent with other research showing potentially large benefits of cooling through ET from urban gardens that are primarily aimed at crop production.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)39-45
Number of pages7
JournalWIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment
Volume243
DOIs
StatePublished - 2020

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This study was supported in part by a National Science Foundation CAREER award (award number 1651361) to G.E. Small. J. Abrahamson, H. Dare, K. Dennis, A. Gilmore, M. Hay, A. Johnson, W. Kreuser, E. Mahre, C. Monroe, G. Pahl, T. Schmitt, I. Tjokrosetio, and S. Wihlm assisted with data collection.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 WITPress. All rights reserved.

Keywords

  • Temperature
  • Urban agriculture
  • Vegetation

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