Urban Trees Prove Crucial in Extreme Heat, Swiss Study Finds
WSL research challenges previous assumptions, showing plane trees continue cooling effect even above 39°C, offering solution for urban heat management
WSL research challenges previous assumptions, showing plane trees continue cooling effect even above 39°C, offering solution for urban heat management

"Obviously, we have not yet fully understood how trees react to extreme conditions."
A critical misunderstanding of urban biology has been dismantled. For years, urban planners and climatologists operated under a grim assumption: that natureâs air conditioning shuts down exactly when we need it most. Conventional science dictated that once the mercury climbs past the 30-35°C threshold, trees close their leaf pores to conserve water, effectively ending their cooling influence. A groundbreaking study by the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (WSL) has shattered this belief.
The findings are unequivocal and game-changing. Plane treesâthe stalwarts of European avenuesâdo not surrender to the heat. Even as temperatures soar beyond a blistering 39°C, these biological engines continue to evaporate massive amounts of water, actively cooling the suffocating urban air around them. This is not a marginal adjustment to our understanding; it is a complete reversal of the expected behavior of urban flora under extreme stress. As Swiss cities grapple with increasingly frequent tropical days, this revelation proves that our green infrastructure is far more resilient and essential than previously calculated.
The evidence comes from the scorching summer of 2023, where the theoretical limits of plant physiology were put to the test on the streets of Lancy, a suburb of Geneva. A joint research team from WSL and EPFL wired up eight plane trees to monitor their internal hydraulics as the city baked. The data they retrieved was startling. Instead of shutting down to preserve moisture as models predicted, the water flow within the tree trunks surged.
"Obviously, we have not yet fully understood how trees react to extreme conditions," admitted study leader Christoph Bachofen. This admission highlights a significant gap in our previous climate models. The trees in Lancy didn't just survive; they accelerated their metabolic processes to combat the heat. The researchers suspect these trees are tapping into deep-lying soil water reserves, bypassing the parched surface layers to keep their cooling systems running. This suggests that the resilience of our urban canopy is powered by a hidden, underground network that we are only just beginning to appreciate.
To understand the magnitude of this discovery, one must look at the mechanism at play. Urban cooling is essentially a massive, biological sweating process. Trees draw heat from the environment to evaporate water through their leaves, causing ambient air temperatures to plummet. Until now, the consensus was that above 35°C, photosynthesis fails, and the stomata (leaf pores) snap shut to prevent the tree from drying outâa biological self-defense mechanism that leaves city dwellers exposed to the full force of the heat.
The Swiss study proves that plane trees possess a far more aggressive survival strategy. By keeping their pores open and transpiring heavily even at 39°C, they are prioritizing temperature regulation over water conservation, provided they can access deep water sources. This defies the passive image of urban greenery. These trees are active participants in the city's climate control, pumping moisture into the air precisely when the asphalt and concrete are radiating their peak heat load.
The implications for Swiss urban planning are immediate and critical. If current climate models assume trees stop cooling at 30°C, then we are drastically underestimating the value of our green spaces during dangerous heatwaves. The cooling effect of urban trees is likely significantly higher than any city planner has accounted for. This demands a re-evaluation of how we design our cities for the future.
However, this resilience is not guaranteed for every species. While plane trees have proven themselves as heat warriors, the race is now on to determine which other species can match this performance. As days exceeding 30°C become the norm rather than the exception, selecting the right "climate-proof" trees becomes a matter of public health. We can no longer view trees as mere decoration; they are critical infrastructure. The data from Geneva serves as a wake-up call: nature has the tools to save our cities from overheating, but only if we understand and protect the deep soil systems that fuel them.