Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Mitigation" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Land-use history causes differences in park nighttime cooling capacity and forest structure Richmond IC; Paulauskas MA; Padvaiskas E; Gonzàlez Sinisterra LC; Hutt-Taylor K; Robitaille AL; Ziter CD; 40761092
BIOLOGY
2 Protecting shorelines in Canadian Indigenous communities: Environmental challenges, policy interventions, and mitigation technologies Iravani R; Biagi M; Laforest S; Lee K; Isaacman L; Chen Z; An C; 40554913
ENCS
3 Ten new insights in climate science 2024 Schaeffer R; Schipper ELF; Ospina D; Mirazo P; Alencar A; Anvari M; Artaxo P; Biresselioglu ME; Blome T; Boeckmann M; Brink E; Broadgate W; Bustamante M; Cai W; Canadell JG; Cardinale R; Chidichimo MP; Ditlevsen P; Eicker U; Feron S; Fikru MG; Fuss S; Gaye AT; Gustafsson Ö; Harring N; He C; Hebden S; Heilemann A; Hirota M; Janardhanan N; Juhola S; Jung TY; Kejun J; Kilki? S; Kumarasinghe N; Lapola D; Lee JY; Levis C; Lusambili A; Maasakkers JD; MacIntosh C; Mahmood J; Mankin JS; Marchegiani P; Martin M; Muk 40546753
PHYSICS
4 A review on indoor airborne transmission of COVID-19- modelling and mitigation approaches Rayegan S; Shu C; Berquist J; Jeon J; Zhou LG; Wang LL; Mbareche H; Tardif P; Ge H; 40478135
ENCS
5 Integration of Membrane-Based Pretreatment Methods with Pressure-Retarded Osmosis for Performance Enhancement: A Review Pakdaman S; Nouri G; Mulligan CN; Nasiri F; 40077246
ENCS
6 Construction, renovation, and demolition waste in landfill: a review of waste characteristics, environmental impacts, and mitigation measures Chen Z; Feng Q; Yue R; Chen Z; Moselhi O; Soliman A; Hammad A; An C; 35508848
ENCS
7 COVID-19 Disruption Demonstrates Win-Win Climate Solutions for Major League Sports Seth Wynes 34779201
CONCORDIA
8 What attributes are relevant for drainage culverts to serve as efficient road crossing structures for mammals? Brunen B, Daguet C, Jaeger JAG 32510423
GEOGRAPHY
9 An adaptive plan for prioritizing road sections for fencing to reduce animal mortality. Spanowicz AG, Teixeira FZ, Jaeger JAG 32227646
GEOGRAPHY
10 Assessment of regional greenhouse gas emission from beef cattle production: A case study of Saskatchewan in Canada. Chen Z, An C, Fang H, Zhang Y, Zhou Z, Zhou Y, Zhao S 32217321
ENCS
11 How do landscape context and fences influence roadkill locations of small and medium-sized mammals? Plante J, Jaeger JAG, Desrochers A 30711836
GEOGRAPHY

 

Title:Land-use history causes differences in park nighttime cooling capacity and forest structure
Authors:Richmond ICPaulauskas MAPadvaiskas EGonzàlez Sinisterra LCHutt-Taylor KRobitaille ALZiter CD
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40761092/
DOI:10.1002/eap.70082
Publication:Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America
Keywords:current managementforest structuregreenspaceshistorical ecologyprevious land‐usetemperature mitigationurban ecology
PMID:40761092 Category: Date Added:2025-08-05
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada.
2 Department of Biology, Universidad del Valle, Cali, Colombia.
3 Department of Biology, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St John's, Canada.

Description:

Cities are temporally dynamic ecosystems that experience continuous redevelopment over time. Urban parks, which provide critical benefits to resident wellbeing, are developed on different land-use types and contain natural elements that are susceptible to the effects of historical decision-making. Thus, understanding the current day functioning of our city's ecosystems and planning for the equitable distribution of park benefits in the future requires incorporation and understanding of the impacts of historical decision-making. We measured neighborhood sociodemographic composition, forest structure, and the cooling effect of 33 sites in parks across Montreal, each with a past land-use in one of three classes: agricultural, forested, or industrial. We asked the following questions: (1) what are the effects of historical land-use on current park forest structure, diversity, and consequently the capacity to provide cooling? (2) how do surrounding communities differ around parks of each historical land-use type, and what are the implications for equitable access to cooling? We found that forest structure and cooling capacity differed across past land-use type, and forest structure has complex relationships with park cooling capacity. Our results provide evidence of historical environmental injustice impacting current day cooling capacity for marginalized groups. Previously industrial parks had less cooling capacity at night, while simultaneously being surrounded by communities with higher proportions of immigrants and lower median incomes than Montreal's average. However, daytime cooling capacity was similar across past land-use type, highlighting the importance of current management decisions to provide a critical ecosystem service, temperature mitigation, regardless of a site's history. Planting areas of small, dense forest stands with trees =5 cm dbh within urban parks can help augment daytime cooling benefits in the city but may hinder nighttime cooling. To provide both nighttime and daytime cooling, a mixed management strategy of park trees is required, where small and large trees are incorporated at different densities. Finally, we find evidence of gentrification surrounding all park sites, emphasizing the complex socioecological dynamics of green infrastructure and the need for community-led greening projects paired with social housing policies.





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