Exploring the possibility of Polyalthia longifolia (False Ashoka) plantation as air quality mitigation at kerbside locations
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Abstract
Urban forestry has been promoted under the Agenda 21 (United Nations, 1993) as a means
to make cities more sustainable and carbon friendly (Churkina et al. 2015). This works
primarily through three pathways, which we explore using Polyalthia longifolia (False
Ashoka), a tree that accounts for 5-20% of the urban plantations in Indian cities. Firstly,
trees sequester carbon directly. A Polyalthia longifolia tree with approximately 3-4 cm
stem diameter at breast height and a height of 3 meters (i.e. a relatively small tree trimmed
for aesthetic purposes) has a canopy area of 0.9-1 m 2 and a LAI of 0.8 and sequesters around
8000 kg of CO 2 per year. However, the second and more important mechanism through
which trees in hot climate contribute to making cities less carbon intensive, is, by cooling
their surrounding through evapotranspiration. The same tree evaporates approximately
640,000 kg of water thus cooling its surrounding. This reduces the energy expenditure for
space cooling. Thirdly, trees adsorb particles and trace gasses through the process of dry
deposition. One such tree sequesters 9.6 kg of ozone per year.
In this study we calibrated the DO 3 SE stomatal ozone uptake model for Polyalthia
longifolia. Just like other tropical evergreen trees the tree shows maximum stomatal
conductance during wet seasons but has a remarkable capability to keep up photosynthesis
even at high temperatures and Vapor pressure deficits in summer. Such extreme tolerance
to dry conditions has not been reported so far for any species and may be related to the tree
tapping into the groundwater via a single tap root. As the stomatal conductance of this tree
peaks in the early morning hours it has a strong capability to sequester other criteria air
pollutants, in particular NO 2 .