TY - JOUR
T1 - Urban ecosystem services
T2 - Tree diversity and stability of tropospheric ozone removal
AU - Manes, Fausto
AU - Incerti, Guido
AU - Salvatori, Elisabetta
AU - Vitale, Marcello
AU - Ricotta, Carlo
AU - Costanza, Robert
PY - 2012/1
Y1 - 2012/1
N2 - Urban forests provide important ecosystem services, such as urban air quality improvement by removing pollutants. While robust evidence exists that plant physiology, abundance, and distribution within cities are basic parameters affecting the magnitude and efficiency of air pollution removal, little is known about effects of plant diversity on the stability of this ecosystem service. Here, by means of a spatial analysis integrating system dynamic modeling and geostatistics, we assessed the effects of tree diversity on the removal of tropospheric ozone (O 3) in Rome, Italy, in two years (2003 and 2004) that were very different for climatic conditions and ozone levels. Different tree functional groups showed complementary uptake patterns, related to tree physiology and phenology, maintaining a stable community function across different climatic conditions. Our results, although depending on the city-specific conditions of the studied area, suggest a higher function stability at increasing diversity levels in urban ecosystems. In Rome, such ecosystem services, based on published unitary costs of externalities and of mortality associated with O 3, can be prudently valued to roughly US$2 and $3 million/year, respectively.
AB - Urban forests provide important ecosystem services, such as urban air quality improvement by removing pollutants. While robust evidence exists that plant physiology, abundance, and distribution within cities are basic parameters affecting the magnitude and efficiency of air pollution removal, little is known about effects of plant diversity on the stability of this ecosystem service. Here, by means of a spatial analysis integrating system dynamic modeling and geostatistics, we assessed the effects of tree diversity on the removal of tropospheric ozone (O 3) in Rome, Italy, in two years (2003 and 2004) that were very different for climatic conditions and ozone levels. Different tree functional groups showed complementary uptake patterns, related to tree physiology and phenology, maintaining a stable community function across different climatic conditions. Our results, although depending on the city-specific conditions of the studied area, suggest a higher function stability at increasing diversity levels in urban ecosystems. In Rome, such ecosystem services, based on published unitary costs of externalities and of mortality associated with O 3, can be prudently valued to roughly US$2 and $3 million/year, respectively.
KW - Air quality
KW - Ecophysiology
KW - Ecosystem function
KW - GIS
KW - Rome Italy
KW - Sanitary benefits
KW - Tropospheric ozone
KW - Urban forest
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84858627326&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1890/11-0561.1
DO - 10.1890/11-0561.1
M3 - Article
SN - 1051-0761
VL - 22
SP - 349
EP - 360
JO - Ecological Applications
JF - Ecological Applications
IS - 1
ER -