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It's well established that urban tree cover provides numerous environmental and psychological benefits to city dwellers. Urban trees may also bolster education outcomes and their loss could disproportionately affect students from low-income families, according to new research by University of Utah social scientists.
The study analyzes how the loss of tree cover influenced education outcomes in the Chicago metropolitan region, which was hit hard by infestation.. Ash had been the region's most common non-invasive tree species, accounting for 18% of its street trees, or about 85,000 trees. Between 2010 and 2020 Chicago lost half its standing ash, with the remaining half already dead or in decline, according to the Morton Arboretum.
The study tracked changes in student performance on a standardized test administered to 3rd- through 8th-graders in Illinois, from 2003 to 2012.
They found that test scores in areas with ash borer infestations were reduced after the onset of those infestations relative to unaffected areas that were similar.
They also looked at heterogeneity in the income distribution, and found that schools with more low-income students were less likely to experience infestations. These neighborhoods have less tree cover, so there is less likelihood that ash borer is going to establish. They don't think that the low-income students in unaffected areas are impacted, but the low-income students at these impacted schools seem to be affected more than better-off students at these same schools.
The results were reported this month in the journal Global Environmental Change.
Prior research shows students in neighborhoods with greater tree cover see better test scores. A recent study by U sociologists and geographers, for example, demonstrated how low-income Utah neighborhoods have less tree canopy near their schools. Meanwhile, schools with greater tree cover had fewer students testing below proficient on year-end math and language arts exams.
Generally speaking, better education outcomes could simply be a function of these leafy neighborhoods' higher incomes.
This study is trying to come a little closer to establishing a causal link. They used this natural experiment of the emerald ash borer beetle being introduced and then idiosyncratically spreading around the different neighborhoods in the Chicago metropolitan area.
To conduct the study, the researchers built a novel dataset, combining satellite imagery with Illinois' standardized testing data and emerald ash borer survey efforts.
The state of Illinois was administering this standardized test in that same window when the ash borer first arrived in the area. Every school in Illinois was taking the same test, so the researchers had consistent data across schools and through time."
Instead of merely reaffirming the tree cover-test score correlation, the researchers were able to track changes in school attendance and scores on standardized tests as the beetle infestation ran its course, laying waste to Chicago's ash trees over the span of a decade.
The study identified a 1.22% reduction in the number of students meeting or exceeding Illinois' standardized testing benchmarks in areas hit by the ash borer. This seemingly modest drop carries significant implications when scaled across the entire student population.
They found that schools with more low-income students were less likely to experience infestations because these neighborhoods have less tree cover. But the low-income students at wealthier schools, where infestations were more common, seemed to bear the brunt of the impacts.
Speculating on the mechanisms driving these effects, the researchers noted loss of tree cover could exacerbate urban heat islands, increase air pollution, and diminish the psychological and physiological benefits that greenery provides.
Some possible explanations are just that those students don't have the same resources to go home and recover from, for example, extreme temperatures or pollution-induced headaches the same way that higher-income students at the same schools might have.
Low-income students may also spend more time outdoors in their neighborhoods or remain longer near the school, increasing their exposure to degraded environmental conditions. Conversely, wealthier students might commute from more distant areas or have access to climate-controlled environments that mitigate these impacts.
The findings highlight how environmental changes disproportionately affect vulnerable populations. While low-income neighborhoods were less likely to lose tree cover, low income students - particularly those attending wealthier schools—suffered setbacks when infestations occurred.
It's not just about access to environmental amenities. It's about understanding how their absence can create inequities that ripple through critical aspects of life, like education.
The study underscores the importance of urban forestry initiatives and invasive species management. Efforts to maintain and restore tree cover could play a vital role in mitigating environmental and social disparities. This work also opens the door for further exploration into how ecosystem changes shape human outcomes, particularly in urban settings where environmental inequities are stark.
More information: Alberto Garcia et al, Unequally distributed education impacts of ecosystem degradation: Evidence from an invasive species, Global Environmental Change (2024). DOI: 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2024.102942
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