Role of roadside vegetation as a passive method for urban air particulate matter absorption and its capturing efficiency under different conditions

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dc.identifier.uri http://dx.doi.org/10.15488/9404
dc.identifier.uri https://www.repo.uni-hannover.de/handle/123456789/9458
dc.contributor.author He, Chen ger
dc.date.accessioned 2020-02-24T13:16:53Z
dc.date.available 2020-02-24T13:16:53Z
dc.date.issued 2020
dc.identifier.citation He, Chen: Role of roadside vegetation as a passive method for urban air particulate matter absorption and its capturing efficiency under different conditions. Hannover : Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Universität, Diss., 2020, 186 S. DOI: https://doi.org/10.15488/9404 ger
dc.description.abstract It has been widely discussed that air particulate matter (PM) has become a serious environmental issue which put great threats to human health and life-span. The respiratory and neurodegenerative disease are considered highly related to PM pollution. Most European urban residents are considered under the threat from PM2.5, and ultra-fine PM has even been reported to harm human DNA. With the acceleration of urbanization, traffic-related PM is becoming a large portion of anthropogenic PM in the urban area, finding an efficient way to mitigate the urban PM pollution is thus quite imperative. Green vegetation has been accepted as efficient phytoremediation for urban PM reduction by former researches, but most studies focused on the PM capturing mechanism by vegetation which has large planting area, like city forest, urban green land, and city wetland. The efficiency of roadside vegetation which faces directly to the source of urban PM pollution was, however, rarely reported. This study tries to select the most efficient roadside plants by comparing the PM capturing efficiency of 12 common urban plant species with different leaf traits and leaf surface characteristics in Hanover, Germany; to summarize the similarity of highly efficient plant species; to explore the internal and external factors which lead to the efficiency disparities; and attempts to propose optimal using patterns with efficient roadside plants under different urban conditions. Among all tested plants, Taxus baccata, Pinus nigra, Berberis thunbergii and Hedera helix were found to be the most efficient species; evergreen plants which had needle-shaped leaves were generally more efficient than deciduous species with broad leaves; species with small leaf area tended to possess higher efficiency than species with large leaves. Plant species with rough leaf surface which is resulted from a large amount of existing deep grooves, trichomes and stomata were found quite effective for PM capture. In addition, leaf wax and leaf hydrophilicity were also motivators for high capturing efficiency. In the view of finding optimal using patterns, needle-leaved plants were found efficient for both PM10 and PM2.5 capture under the high traffic pressure, while broad-leaved species was optimal for PM2.5 capture under the light traffic pressure; leaf surface with a height range of 1-2 m was the most effective area for large PM absorption and leaf wax was effective for fine PM reduction at all height ranges. In brief, complex planting pattern which combines both efficient needle-leaved and broad-leaved roadside vegetation, or a vertical green wall which is covered by efficient roadside plant species are recommended by us as optimal using patterns. This study especially highlights the role of roadside vegetation as eco-friendly phytoremediation for urban PM pollution absorption and is supposed as a theoretical basis for future roadside green infrastructure management and city planning. ger
dc.language.iso eng ger
dc.publisher Hannover : Institutionelles Repositorium der Leibniz Universität Hannover
dc.rights CC BY 3.0 DE ger
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/de/ ger
dc.subject urban particulate matters eng
dc.subject roadside plants eng
dc.subject leaf traits eng
dc.subject green wall eng
dc.subject traffic pressure eng
dc.subject Feinstaub ger
dc.subject Straßenrandvegetation ger
dc.subject Blattmerkmale ger
dc.subject grüne Wand ger
dc.subject Verkehrsdruck ger
dc.subject.ddc 570 | Biowissenschaften, Biologie ger
dc.subject.ddc 333,7 | Natürliche Ressourcen, Energie und Umwelt ger
dc.title Role of roadside vegetation as a passive method for urban air particulate matter absorption and its capturing efficiency under different conditions eng
dc.type DoctoralThesis ger
dc.type Text ger
dcterms.extent 186 S.
dc.description.version publishedVersion ger
tib.accessRights frei zug�nglich ger


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