Using the RefillRx mobile app? Then you will love our new, ENHANCED Sentry Drug Center mobile app.
Quickly request refills or login and manage your prescriptions on the go!
Available on both iTunes and Google Play.

Call or Visit for All of your Vaccination Needs!

Get Healthy!

  • Posted March 20, 2024

Roadside Trees, Bushes Are Cutting Air Pollution, Study Finds

Planting trees and bushes near busy highways helps clear the air of harmful air pollutants from motor vehicles, new research affirms.

"They provide benefits that go beyond aesthetics," Roby Greenwald, an associate professor of public health at Georgia State University in Atlanta, said in a university news release.

"But," he added, "I don't want to give anyone the impression that we can solve all of the problems associated with motor vehicle emissions simply by planting trees."

Greenwald is the lead author of a new study that sampled air quality along five Atlanta-area highways and interstates. The findings were recently published in the journal PLoS One.

When air at sites with natural or ornamental vegetation was compared with that from similar sites without vegetation, the results were clear: Soot levels were 37% lower and ultrafine particles, 7% lower. 

Vegetation doesn't, however, reduce hazardous carbon dioxide emissions or ozone pollution, Greenwald emphasized.

"Trees and bushes near roadways don't solve the problem of air pollution caused by motor vehicles, but they can help reduce the severity of the problem," he said in the news release.

Motor vehicle exhaust has been linked to asthma, chronic bronchitis, lung cancer and heart attacks, and remedies are urgently needed, researchers said. 

In the U.S., 45 million people live, work or go to school within 300 feet of a major highway, they pointed out.

Vegetation at the roadside pulls pollutants from the air in several ways. For one, it provides a large surface area where small airborne particles can land.

Previous research has investigated the role roadside vegetation can play in cleaning the air over time. Researchers used a model that accounted for factors such as wind direction, traffic volume and proximity to the highway. 

To make a bigger impact on air quality, local governments should make it safe, convenient and agreeable for folks to get where they need to go without a motor vehicle, Greenwald said. That might mean making more public transportation available, for example, or developing and improving bike and pedestrian paths.

More information

The nonprofit One Tree Planted has more about how trees clean the air.

SOURCE: Georgia State University, news release, March 19, 2024

Health News is provided as a service to Sentry Drug Center #3 site users by HealthDay. Sentry Drug Center #3 nor its employees, agents, or contractors, review, control, or take responsibility for the content of these articles. Please seek medical advice directly from your pharmacist or physician.
Copyright © 2024 HealthDay All Rights Reserved.