School of Agriculture, Food and Ecosystem Sciences - Research Publications

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    Supporting Growth and Transpiration of Newly Planted Street Trees With Passive Irrigation Systems
    Thom, JK ; Fletcher, TD ; Livesley, SJ ; Grey, V ; Szota, C (Wiley Open Access, 2022-01)
    Solutions that use stormwater runoff to rapidly establish tree canopy cover in cities have received significant attention. Passive irrigation systems that direct stormwater to trees have the potential to increase growth and transpiration and may limit drought stress. However, little data from the field demonstrates this, and we lack robust and reliable designs which achieve it. Here, we quantified growth and transpiration for trees: (a) in infiltration pits receiving stormwater, with a raised underdrain and internal water storage (drained), (b) next to infiltration pits receiving stormwater but without an underdrain and internal water storage (adjacent), and (c) planted in standard pits, not receiving stormwater (control). Trees in drained pits grew twice as fast as control trees in the first 2 years, but fast initial growth rates were not sustained in years three and four. Trees outgrowing the small infiltration pits, rather than a lack of water, was most likely responsible for growth rates slowing down. Despite this, rapid initial growth for trees in drained pits meant trees were larger by year three and transpired more than twice as much (5.1 L d−1) as trees adjacent to pits (2.4 L d−1) or control trees (2.3 L d−1). No trees showed drought stress during the study. However, some trees planted adjacent to infiltration pits showed waterlogging stress, suggesting caution installing infiltration pits adjacent to establishing trees in fine‐textured soils. Overall, our results suggest passive irrigation systems can substantially increase initial tree growth, thereby facilitating greater cooling and runoff reduction through increased transpiration.
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    Can we integrate ecological approaches to improve plant selection for green infrastructure?
    Farrell, C ; Livesley, SJ ; Arndt, SK ; Beaumont, L ; Burley, H ; Ellsworth, D ; Esperon-Rodriguez, M ; Fletcher, TD ; Gallagher, R ; Ossola, A ; Power, SA ; Marchin, R ; Rayner, JP ; Rymer, PD ; Staas, L ; Szota, C ; Williams, NSG ; Leishman, M (ELSEVIER GMBH, 2022-10)
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    Selecting tree species with high transpiration and drought avoidance to optimise runoff reduction in passive irrigation systems
    Thom, JK ; Livesley, SJ ; Fletcher, TD ; Farrell, C ; Arndt, SK ; Konarska, J ; Szota, C (ELSEVIER, 2022-03-15)
    Rainfall in cities can generate large volumes of stormwater runoff which degrades receiving waterways. Irrigating trees with runoff (passive irrigation) has the potential to increase transpiration and contribute to stormwater management by reducing runoff received by downstream waterways, but the stochastic nature of rainfall may expose trees with high transpiration to drought stress. We hypothesized that for success in passive irrigation systems, tree species should exhibit i) high maximum transpiration rates under well-watered conditions, ii) drought avoidance between rainfall events, and iii) high recovery of transpiration with rainfall following a drought. We assessed 13 commonly planted urban tree species in Melbourne, Australia against three metrics representing these behaviours (crop factor, hydroscape area, and transpiration recovery, respectively) in a glasshouse experiment. To aid species selection, we also investigated the relationships between these three metrics and commonly measured plant traits, including leaf turgor loss point, wood density, and sapwood to leaf area ratio (Huber value). Only one species (Tristaniopsis laurina) exhibited a combination of high crop factor (>1.1 mm mm-1 d-1) indicating high transpiration, small hydroscape area (<3 MPa2) indicating drought avoidance, and high transpiration recovery (>85%) following water deficit. Hence, of the species measured, it had the greatest potential to reduce runoff from passive irrigation systems while avoiding drought stress. Nevertheless, several other species showed moderate transpiration, hydroscape areas and transpiration recovery, indicating a balanced strategy likely suitable for passive irrigation systems. Huber values were negatively related to crop factor and transpiration recovery and may therefore be a useful tool to aid species selection. We propose that selecting tree species with high transpiration rates that can avoid drought and recover well could greatly reduce stormwater runoff, while supporting broader environmental benefits such as urban cooling in cities.