Gathering data from satellites and sensors placed on trees, the network measured temperatures across different types of urban green spaces in 12 U.S. cities, including New York. It found that the air temperature was cooler in forests compared to landscaped trees at over 90 percent of locations.
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The iconic green space will become the site of a study on the impacts of climate change and the best mitigation practices for urban parks across the country.
Hurricanes, record breaking heat waves and torrential downpours. These deadly effects of climate change are seen nationwide and around the world, destroying homes, flooding communities and bringing physical harm to the elderly and unhoused. But those are not the only ways that climate change affects communities even the public parks and greenspaces are negatively.