'Trees filter the air'

'Trees filter the air'

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Simpo Two

Original Poster:

87,059 posts

272 months

Tuesday 5th December 2023
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Or do they? I heard that phrase on the news, but wondered how they did it. Air enters via the stomata, and through the wonder of photosynthesis CO2 is converted to O2, but do trees really remove air pollution and if so by what mechanism?

Beati Dogu

9,191 posts

146 months

Tuesday 5th December 2023
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I think it’s more that pollution particles gets trapped on the leaves and branches before the rain washes it away. Trees do give out pollutants like isoprene, but then so do we.

dvs_dave

9,040 posts

232 months

Wednesday 6th December 2023
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Yes, they do, particularly Plane trees as they routinely shed their bark. Although the effect is marginal.

https://www.sciencefocus.com/planet-earth/do-londo...

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

87,059 posts

272 months

Wednesday 6th December 2023
quotequote all
dvs_dave said:
Yes, they do, particularly Plane trees as they routinely shed their bark. Although the effect is marginal.

https://www.sciencefocus.com/planet-earth/do-londo...
Thanks; I know about plane trees, but they are the exception - most trees don't shed bark.

So I wondered if it was one of those pseudo-science soundbytes that sounds good but doesn't stand examination.

As for the BBC saying 'Plane trees do emit isoprene though, which combines with nitrous oxide in car exhaust emissions to produce harmful ozone' - do they? I can't find a reference to it.

Edited by Simpo Two on Wednesday 6th December 20:07

welshjon81

645 posts

148 months

Thursday 7th December 2023
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In essence, trees are composed primarily of carbon. Their mass is derived from the atmosphere, where they extract carbon from CO2 and subsequently release the oxygen component back into the air.


Simpo Two

Original Poster:

87,059 posts

272 months

Thursday 7th December 2023
quotequote all
welshjon81 said:
In essence, trees are composed primarily of carbon. Their mass is derived from the atmosphere, where they extract carbon from CO2 and subsequently release the oxygen component back into the air.
Indeed they do; once upon a time I could have drawn you a cross section of a chloroplast cell wall with all the proteins of photosynthesis in it and the accompanying biochemistry from CO2 to glucose. But the question here is whether they 'filter out' air pollution, and I remain unconvinced.

Pistom

5,577 posts

166 months

Thursday 7th December 2023
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I would have thought with all the wind they create when they move and fan the air, they'd be moving a fair amount of pollution about.

But physics wasn't my strong point.

lufbramatt

5,427 posts

141 months

Thursday 7th December 2023
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Possibly comes from a NASA study that found plants could remove chemicals like formaldehyde from the air under lab conditions. But I'm sure subsequent studies showed that to make any useful effect you'd need more plants than you could physically fit into the room.

Cryssys

540 posts

45 months

Monday 11th December 2023
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There is limited evidence that certain houseplants can remove/absorb a range of pollutants in some circumstances :

https://neoplants.com/blog/air-purifying-plants

How beneficial this is remains open to question.

Further google searching, e.g. do plants remove pollutants reveals further evidence that they do however there real world effectiveness appears to be quite limited.

bucksmanuk

2,331 posts

177 months

Tuesday 19th December 2023
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Pistom said:
I would have thought with all the wind they create when they move and fan the air.....
.
Sorry for the slow response – but my mum was convinced of this. I thought I had misheard her.
I am afraid she dropped down in my estimation that day….

Kawasicki

13,465 posts

242 months

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

87,059 posts

272 months

Friday 29th December 2023
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Kawasicki said:
It's interesting, but too woolly; too many 'mights' and 'can be's'. And that seems to be a problem with science these days - too much extrapolation and too much headlining with little significant support. Perfect fodder for the media (and those with vested interests) to make mountains from molehills and spray stuff around that can effectively be false or at best misleading.

Kawasicki

13,465 posts

242 months

Friday 29th December 2023
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Simpo Two said:
Kawasicki said:
It's interesting, but too woolly; too many 'mights' and 'can be's'. And that seems to be a problem with science these days - too much extrapolation and too much headlining with little significant support. Perfect fodder for the media (and those with vested interests) to make mountains from molehills and spray stuff around that can effectively be false or at best misleading.
How dare you question peer reviewed science.

Denier!

“Those with vested interests“ is tantamount to admitting you believe in conspiracy theories. Bet you also believe the earth is flat.

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

87,059 posts

272 months

Friday 29th December 2023
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Kawasicki said:
Denier!
I was thinking about that word yesterday, which is inspired by the phrase 'holocaust denier'; ergo, a denier is in the same box as the Nazis and very bad. But there are other categories. As well as Denier I propose Accepter, Evangelist and Sucker; but it's best that fight stays on another thread smile

Silvanus

6,036 posts

30 months

Friday 29th December 2023
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Trees don't really filter the air as such. They do however remove air pollution by capturing particulate matter on their leaves and bark with the absorption of some small levels gaseous pollutants through the leaf stomata. The pollutants on the tree surfaces are then either absorbed or later fixed into the soil bellow. They of course have the benefits already mentioned of absorbing carbon and releasing oxygen. Water absorption and soil stabilisation have big benefits too, by reducing runoff they can reduce the amount of chemicals and pollutants entering watercourses, riparian trees are particularly useful. They also have a cooling affect bringing down air ground, and water/river temperatures. Loads of other benefits too.

ATG

21,355 posts

279 months

Friday 29th December 2023
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Think I read somewhere about particulates (dunno what size) concentration being reduced downwind of trees. Seems reasonable as (a) the trees provide a surface area on which the particulates can adhere and (b) they locally create turbulence that will slow the bulk air helping gravity "win" and also creating pockets of slow moving air in which particles will tend to congregate and may allow them to conglomerate into bigger particles, again helping gravity "win". Imperial do a lot of urban air quality research. Might be worth seeing if they've published anything. Feels like the kind of thing you could measure fairly easily if you could carpet an urban area in detectors. I guess it comes down to the cost of doing so.

From the university of anecdote, I can certainly attest that an urban privet hedge captures a huge amount of crap from the air. The foliage becomes absolutely filthy.

Edited by ATG on Friday 29th December 11:49

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

87,059 posts

272 months

Friday 29th December 2023
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Thanks to the genius of Amazon - how do they know? - this appeared in the 'stuff you might want' category...

https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B08X2V5K28

Kawasicki

13,465 posts

242 months

Friday 29th December 2023
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
Thanks to the genius of Amazon - how do they know? - this appeared in the 'stuff you might want' category...

https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B08X2V5K28
The Amazon is actually a major source of methane, a very powerful greenhouse gas. wink



Simpo Two

Original Poster:

87,059 posts

272 months

Saturday 30th December 2023
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Kawasicki said:
The Amazon is actually a major source of methane, a very powerful greenhouse gas. wink
Well that's OK, just trap it and burn it as fuel. The resultant CO2 is much less effective as a GG...

Therefore we need to burn more methane. Bring on the cows! And when there's an excess of cows, we can eat them, which is an excellent repurposing of organic matter smile