Effect of plant traits and substrate moisture on the thermal performance of different plant species in vertical greenery systems

Abstract

This study evaluated the effects of plant traits and substrate moisture on the thermal performance of four herbs and four shrubs, which are the most commonly used species in vertical greenery systems (VGSs), in humid subtropical Hong Kong over a one-year period. The canopy temperature reduction on sunny days was significantly correlated with canopy coverage and leaf area index (LAI), but not with daily evapotranspiration (ET). This indicated that the shading effect of VGSs, which is related to canopy coverage and LAI, was more prominent than ET cooling. The lack of significant correlation between substrate moisture, ET and canopy temperature indicated that substrate moisture and ET did not significantly enhance the canopy cooling of VGSs. Substrate moisture notably cooled the substrate on sunny days, and warmed the substrate on rainy days, which significantly affected substrate thermal behavior, but had less effect on canopy air temperature. The use of VGSs with eight common plant species on building envelopes reduced steady-state heat conduction by 18.7–39.8%, with Ficus elastica (rubber fig) causing the greatest canopy cooling

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