Published June 5, 2025 | Version v1
Presentation Open

High transpiration cooling by urban trees despite extreme summer heatwaves

  • 1. Swiss Federal Institute of Forest, Snow, and Landscape Research (WSL)
  • 2. Haute Ecole INSA
  • 3. ROR icon National University of Singapore
  • 4. ROR icon Université Savoie Mont Blanc
  • 5. ROR icon École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

Description

Urban trees cool their environment by transpiration (latent heat flux, LE) and shading, modifying thereby the energy budget and alleviating urban heat. The cooling effect from LE may be critically reduced during heatwaves, when trees reduce stomatal conductance (gS) to prevent hydraulic dysfunctions. Recent advances in our understanding of stomatal behaviour under high temperatures indicate that gS may still be maintained during extreme heat to allow canopy cooling, but implications for urban heat stress mitigation remain elusive.

We continuously recorded sap flow on eight Platanus x acerifolia trees in Geneva to assess LE and canopy conductance (GAsw) during the summer of 2023, which was characterised by two record-breaking heatwaves. We further repeatedly assessed stomatal conductance (gS), and leaf, canopy, and ground surface temperatures in shaded and sunlit parts around the trees. Using the ecohydrological model UT&C, we determined the total energy budget of the urban square.

We found that despite prolonged heatwaves with air temperature (Tair) reaching 39.1 ºC, trees continued transpiring throughout the day up to 37.1 kg h-1 (i.e. LE of 25.3 kW). LE was similar during heatwaves (i.e., Tair > 30 ºC) as during cooler periods and accounted for approximately 34 % of the urban heating by incoming solar radiation (Q*). In contrast, LE model predictions showed a marked decrease of urban cooling during heatwaves, thereby underestimating actual tree transpiration cooling.

Despite unprecedentedly high Tair during two summer heatwaves, trees maintained high transpiration, and thereby efficiently cooled the urban environment. Measured LE at Tair above 30 ºC surpassed model estimations due to continued tree transpiration. Consequently, actual cooling effects of urban trees during heatwaves might be considerably underestimated by current model predictions. Cities with intermittent heatwaves may thus continue to rely on effective vegetation cooling by transpiration.

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