A Global Review of Vegetation’s Interaction Effect on Urban Heat Mitigation Across Different Climates
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Moncada-Morales, Guillermo A.; Verichev, Konstantin; Lopez-Guerrero, Rafael E.; Carpio Martínez, ManuelEditorial
MDPI
Materia
urban vegetation Heat mitigation urban climates 
Fecha
2025-09-09Referencia bibliográfica
Moncada-Morales, G.A.; Verichev, K.; López-Guerrero, R.E.; Carpio, M. A Global Review of Vegetation’s Interaction Effect on Urban Heat Mitigation Across Different Climates. Urban Sci. 2025, 9, 361. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci9090361
Patrocinador
ANID/Scholarship Program/DOCTORATE SCHOLARSHIPS CHILE (21230600); ANID BASAL (FB210015 CENAMAD); ANID FONDECYT (1201052; BG23/00134)Resumen
The urbanisation process of cities disrupts the natural energy balance and surface radiation,
making cities relatively warm. While vegetation has been widely recognised as a key factor
in mitigating urban heat, its effectiveness is shaped by interactions with urban morphology,
surface cover types, and the background climate. This paper presents a bibliometric analysis of studies examining the role of vegetation in mitigating urban heat, with a particular
focus on its interactions within the urban environment across four major Köppen–Geiger
climate groups: tropical, arid, temperate, and cold. A total of 130 publications were reviewed, categorised, and analysed according to geographic distribution, study period,
and methodological approaches. This review identifies underexplored areas, synthesises
key findings, and summarises the most significant results. Vegetation and water bodies
emerged as primary contributors to heat mitigation, along with building configuration,
wind speed, and shading. Temperate climates were the most frequently studied. Remote
sensing was the predominant methodological approach, followed by fixed in situ observations. Meso-scale studies, examining entire cities and their surroundings, dominated in
terms of spatial scale. This review offers methodological recommendations for analysing
urban vegetation within the context of urban climate research. As climate change intensifies,
it is increasingly important to design and implement adaptation strategies that incorporate
but are not limited to vegetation. Such strategies are essential to supporting sustainable
and resilient urban development in diverse climatic contexts.





