Quality assessment of urban trees using growth visual and chlorophyll fluorescence indicators

Urbanised landscape represents composed structures of technical and biotic elements where social and economy activities create living space for human society but with strongly changed environment. To dominant characters belong climate changes with increased air temperature, drought and emission load...

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Main Authors: Uhrin Peter, Supuka Ján
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2016-06-01
Series:Ekológia (Bratislava)
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/eko-2016-0013
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spelling doaj-bc8c4528900d4172a92de3281cf55c4d2021-09-05T20:44:47ZengSciendoEkológia (Bratislava)1337-947X2016-06-0135216017210.1515/eko-2016-0013eko-2016-0013Quality assessment of urban trees using growth visual and chlorophyll fluorescence indicatorsUhrin Peter0Supuka Ján1Slovak University of Agriculture in Nitra, Faculty of Horticulture and Landscape Engineering, Department of Garden and Landscape Architecture, Tr. A. Hlinku 2, 949 76 Nitra, Slovak RepublicSlovak University of Agriculture in Nitra, Faculty of Horticulture and Landscape Engineering, Department of Garden and Landscape Architecture, Tr. A. Hlinku 2, 949 76 Nitra, Slovak RepublicUrbanised landscape represents composed structures of technical and biotic elements where social and economy activities create living space for human society but with strongly changed environment. To dominant characters belong climate changes with increased air temperature, drought and emission load, which has developed wide spectrum of stress factors influencing the urban vegetation. For the assessment of plant growth and adaptation response, we have used Sycamore maple (Acer pseudoplatanus L.) as study model woody plant. In the framework of visual characters, we assessed the following indicators: (a) assimilation organs (leaf necrosis); (b) crown quality (degree of foliage and degree of dead tree crown); (c) trunk and branch quality (mechanical damage, incidence of wood destroying fungus and trunk cavities and callus healing of trunk wounds). Each indicator was assessed in five-point scale, and in the end, the common index of quality was calculated. The quality index achieved 9.33 points in the first and 10.33 in the second evaluation periods in the Nitra city and 2.66 at the both assessed periods in the comparable rural park. In the group of physiological indicators, chlorophyll a fluorescence marker and its Fv/Fm parameter were used. Within three repeating assessment during growing season (June, August and September), the average values reached Fv/Fm = 0.814 in the city and Fv/Fm = 0.829 in rural park. The results confirmed statistical significances between loaded city conditions and relatively clean rural locality. Used markers have shown as appropriate tools for growth response measurements of street trees in a changed urban environment.https://doi.org/10.1515/eko-2016-0013urban environmentstreet treesstress indicators
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Uhrin Peter
Supuka Ján
spellingShingle Uhrin Peter
Supuka Ján
Quality assessment of urban trees using growth visual and chlorophyll fluorescence indicators
Ekológia (Bratislava)
urban environment
street trees
stress indicators
author_facet Uhrin Peter
Supuka Ján
author_sort Uhrin Peter
title Quality assessment of urban trees using growth visual and chlorophyll fluorescence indicators
title_short Quality assessment of urban trees using growth visual and chlorophyll fluorescence indicators
title_full Quality assessment of urban trees using growth visual and chlorophyll fluorescence indicators
title_fullStr Quality assessment of urban trees using growth visual and chlorophyll fluorescence indicators
title_full_unstemmed Quality assessment of urban trees using growth visual and chlorophyll fluorescence indicators
title_sort quality assessment of urban trees using growth visual and chlorophyll fluorescence indicators
publisher Sciendo
series Ekológia (Bratislava)
issn 1337-947X
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Urbanised landscape represents composed structures of technical and biotic elements where social and economy activities create living space for human society but with strongly changed environment. To dominant characters belong climate changes with increased air temperature, drought and emission load, which has developed wide spectrum of stress factors influencing the urban vegetation. For the assessment of plant growth and adaptation response, we have used Sycamore maple (Acer pseudoplatanus L.) as study model woody plant. In the framework of visual characters, we assessed the following indicators: (a) assimilation organs (leaf necrosis); (b) crown quality (degree of foliage and degree of dead tree crown); (c) trunk and branch quality (mechanical damage, incidence of wood destroying fungus and trunk cavities and callus healing of trunk wounds). Each indicator was assessed in five-point scale, and in the end, the common index of quality was calculated. The quality index achieved 9.33 points in the first and 10.33 in the second evaluation periods in the Nitra city and 2.66 at the both assessed periods in the comparable rural park. In the group of physiological indicators, chlorophyll a fluorescence marker and its Fv/Fm parameter were used. Within three repeating assessment during growing season (June, August and September), the average values reached Fv/Fm = 0.814 in the city and Fv/Fm = 0.829 in rural park. The results confirmed statistical significances between loaded city conditions and relatively clean rural locality. Used markers have shown as appropriate tools for growth response measurements of street trees in a changed urban environment.
topic urban environment
street trees
stress indicators
url https://doi.org/10.1515/eko-2016-0013
work_keys_str_mv AT uhrinpeter qualityassessmentofurbantreesusinggrowthvisualandchlorophyllfluorescenceindicators
AT supukajan qualityassessmentofurbantreesusinggrowthvisualandchlorophyllfluorescenceindicators
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