Biology Department, Saint Mary's University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Ann Bot. 2011 Apr;107(4):671-9. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcr007. Epub 2011 Feb 2.
Green roofs are constructed ecosystems where plants perform valuable services, ameliorating the urban environment through roof temperature reductions and stormwater interception. Plant species differ in functional characteristics that alter ecosystem properties. Plant performance research on extensive green roofs has so far indicated that species adapted to dry conditions perform optimally. However, in moist, humid climates, species typical of wetter soils might have advantages over dryland species. In this study, survival, growth and the performance of thermal and stormwater capture functions of three pairs of dryland and wetland plant species were quantified using an extensive modular green roof system.
Seedlings of all six species were germinated in a greenhouse and planted into green roof modules with 6 cm of growing medium. There were 34 treatments consisting of each species in monoculture and all combinations of wet- and dryland species in a randomized block design. Performance measures were survival, vegetation cover and roof surface temperature recorded for each module over two growing seasons, water loss (an estimate of evapotranspiration) in 2007, and albedo and water capture in 2008.
Over two seasons, dryland plants performed better than wetland plants, and increasing the number of dryland species in mixtures tended to improve functioning, although there was no clear effect of species or habitat group diversity. All species had survival rates >75 % after the first winter; however, dryland species had much greater cover, an important indicator of green roof performance. Sibbaldiopsis tridentata was the top performing species in monoculture, and was included in the best treatments.
Although dryland species outperformed wetland species, planting extensive green roofs with both groups decreased performance only slightly, while increasing diversity and possibly habitat value. This study provides further evidence that plant composition and diversity can influence green roof functions.
绿色屋顶是一种构建的生态系统,其中植物通过降低屋顶温度和截留雨水来提供有价值的服务,从而改善城市环境。植物物种在功能特征上存在差异,这些特征改变了生态系统的特性。到目前为止,关于扩展型绿色屋顶的植物性能研究表明,适应干旱条件的物种表现最佳。然而,在潮湿、湿润的气候条件下,适应湿润土壤的物种可能比旱地物种具有优势。在这项研究中,使用扩展型模块化绿色屋顶系统,量化了三种旱地和湿地植物物种对生存、生长以及热和雨水截留功能的表现。
所有六种植物的幼苗在温室中发芽,然后种植在带有 6 厘米生长介质的绿色屋顶模块中。有 34 种处理,包括每种物种的单一种植和湿地和旱地物种的所有组合,采用随机区组设计。在两个生长季节中,每个模块的生存、植被覆盖率和屋顶表面温度记录为性能指标,2007 年记录水分损失(估计为蒸散量),2008 年记录反照率和雨水截留量。
在两个季节中,旱地植物的表现优于湿地植物,并且增加混合物中旱地植物的数量往往会改善功能,尽管物种或栖息地组多样性没有明显的影响。所有物种在第一个冬季后存活率均>75%;然而,旱地物种的覆盖率要高得多,这是绿色屋顶性能的一个重要指标。Sibbaldiopsis tridentata 是单一种植中表现最好的物种,并且被包含在最佳处理中。
尽管旱地物种的表现优于湿地物种,但种植这两类植物的扩展型绿色屋顶的性能仅略有下降,同时增加了多样性并可能增加了栖息地的价值。本研究进一步证明了植物组成和多样性可以影响绿色屋顶的功能。