Authors
Elina NM Inkiläinen, Melissa R McHale, Gary B Blank, April L James, Eero Nikinmaa
Publication date
2013/11/1
Journal
Landscape and urban planning
Volume
119
Pages
91-103
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Overwhelming stormwater volumes, associated with deteriorating water quality and severe flooding in urbanizing cities, have become a great environmental and financial concern globally. Urban forests are capable of reducing the amount of stormwater runoff, in part, by regulating throughfall via canopy rainfall interception; however, the lack of stand-scale studies of urban throughfall hinders realistic estimates of the benefits of urban vegetation for stormwater regulation. Furthermore, urban forest characteristics that may be influencing rainfall interception are difficult to establish as these environments are extremely heterogeneous and managed, to a large extent, by private residents with varying landscape preferences. To quantify the amount of rainfall interception by vegetation in a residential urban forest we measured throughfall in Raleigh, NC, USA between July and November 2010. We analyzed 16 residential …
Total citations
201420152016201720182019202020212022202320246151020121413131086
Scholar articles