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An Experiment in Central Park Offers a View of Cities’ Climate Future
When Hurricane Ida dumped more than 3 inches of rain on Central Park in a single hour, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration a “1-in-500 year rainfall event.”
The downpour broke the park’s previous rainfall record, set just . It damaged scores of trees, flooded the Loeb Boathouse, transformed the area surrounding Bethesda Fountain into a massive pool, and rendered much of the park inaccessible for days. It illustrated just how vulnerable the city’s parks are to the effects of climate change—and how little is understood about the relationship between parks and shifts in weather patterns.
“We have been witnessing the increasing impacts of climate change throughout Central Park for some time now,” said Michelle Mueller Gámez, manager of climate change research at Central Park Conservancy, the nonprofit that manages Central Park. Those impacts include harmful algae blooms during the summer, extreme and frequent heat waves, and intense rain over short periods of time that cause flooding, she said. “The damage that’s caused to Central Park during these extreme events makes it increasingly harder for our staff to maintain and care for all 843 acres.”
Earlier this year, the Central Park Conservancy, together with the Yale School of the Environment and the Natural Areas Conservancy, launched the . The goal, Mueller Gámez said, is to collect data on ways in which the park is changing so its custodians can care for it accordingly. “Other urban parks are facing similar challenges,” she said. “We hope our findings can be a resource to exchange and share information with other urban landscapes.”
Ƶ than half of the world’s people now live in cities, and parks are the primary way many of them experience nature. In New York, half the population that their only exposure to the natural environment is through the city’s parks. They help keep residents (and ); their soils absorb rainwater and runoff, and their trees improve air quality and capture carbon dioxide.
But many are in trouble. The U.S. —the equivalent of nine grand canyons—of natural areas, including parks, between 2001 and 2017 to land conversion. Many, including Central Park, have experienced tree die-offs due to invasive species, like the emerald ash borer, porcelain berry, lesser celandine, and Japanese knotweed, which thrive in warmer weather. U.S. cities each year.
“The health of the park and its forest are at risk,” said Clara Pregitzer, deputy director of conservation science at the Natural Areas Conservancy. “If it’s hotter, if the lawn is flooding, if the lake itself has algal blooms, it will just be a less pleasant place to visit.”
Pregitzer studies the ways urban . In a published this year, she found that urban forests store carbon at similar and, in some cases, higher rates compared with rural forests. “I think natural areas as a type of parkland are undervalued in their contribution to climate change mitigation and approach to adaptation,” she said.
But pests, flooding, storms, drought, and high temperatures all put those trees at risk. In 2012, Superstorm Sandy, which was made due to climate change, damaged or uprooted some 800 trees in Central Park. “Some of those trees have been there for 300, 400 years. You have these large oak trees—they are really magical and they make the park beautiful—and if they topple over, they’ll take a generation to [replace],” Pregitzer said.
Central Park contains a multitude of microclimates—lawns, natural areas, wetlands, and forests, to name a few—and caring for the entire park means understanding the different stresses affecting each area.
“We actually don’t know what the changes in rainfall and temperature [have been throughout] the park,” said Karen Seto, a professor of geography and urbanization science at the Yale School of the Environment. She said most temperature readings of the park don’t account for variability in climate conditions; a shady wooded area can be expected to be cooler than a grassy lawn.
This spring, in one of the center’s first experiments, Seto and a team of scientists took light measurements using a spectroradiometer—a tool that can help scientists assess the health of a plant—throughout the park to collect data on the park’s varied microclimates. Using satellite data, they’ll monitor changes to the park’s flora over the years.
“The goal of the project is to understand how climate change manifests itself across the entire park and to understand what are the best practices to manage the park under those conditions,” Seto said. Those practices could mean planting species that are more adaptive to flooding or warmer temperatures, or increasing the amount of to soak up more rainwater, she said.
Mueller Gámez and her team are collecting data on temperature variances throughout the park by installing solar-powered sensors in the park’s lawns, forested areas, playgrounds, and meadows, among other areas. She said this information will help planners think about ways to keep New Yorkers cool during heat waves.
“The idea is to understand the benefits of natural and forested areas and how we can enhance them if we understand we’re getting more cooling benefits,” said Mueller Gámez. Though it’s intuitive that shaded areas are naturally cooler on hot days, the sensors will quantify just how much cooler.
Parks don’t just keep cities cooler and ; people who spend time in parks and nature are to engage in “environmentally friendly behavior.”
Pregitzer said part of the lab’s mission is simply helping visitors understand how climate change relates to their daily lives. “Central Park is so iconic, and I think people really connect with it,” she said. “Learning about natural climate solutions in your own backyard can be very powerful.”
This article was originally published by . It has been published here with permission.
Danielle Renwick
is editor of Nexus Ƶ News, where she oversees news features, journalism projects, and media partnerships. Prior to joining Nexus Ƶ News, Danielle was an editor at the Guardian US, where she was part of an award-winning investigation into US healthcare workers lost to Covid-19. She has reported from Brazil, Argentina, Cuba, and her home state of Wisconsin, with bylines appearing in The New York Times, NPR, and Marketplace, among other outlets. Danielle has a master’s degree from Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs and a bachelor’s degree in journalism from New York University. She speaks Spanish and Portuguese, and as a new mom, enjoys the occasional nap.
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