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Water availability drives urban tree growth responses to herbivory and warming

Dates

Publication Date

Citation

Emily K. Meineke, and Steven Frank, 2018-03-13, Water availability drives urban tree growth responses to herbivory and warming: Journal of Applied Ecology.

Summary

Abstract from Journal of Applied Ecology: Urban forests provide important ecosystem services to city residents, including pollution removal and carbon storage. Climate change and urbanization pose multiple threats to these services. However, how these threats combine to affect urban trees, and thus how to mitigate their effects, remains largely untested because multi-factorial experiments on mature trees are impractical. We used a unique urban warming experiment paired with a laboratory chamber experiment to determine how three of the most potentially damaging factors associated with global change for urban and rural trees—warming, drought, and insect herbivory—affect growth of Quercus phellos(willow oak), the most commonly planted [...]

Contacts

Author :
Emily K. Meineke, Steven Frank
Funding Agency :
Southeast CSC

Attached Files

Communities

  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Southeast CASC

Associated Items

Tags

Categories
Label
Wildlife and Plants
Science Themes
Types

Provenance

Data source
Input directly

Additional Information

Citation Extension

citationTypeJournal Article
journalJournal of Applied Ecology
parts
typeDOI
value10.1111/1365-2664.13130

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