Investigating the plant species and rainfall factors on stormwater retention performance of extensive green roofs in Malaysia

Information on the influences of native plant species and rainfall characteristics on the stormwater retention performance of extensive green roofs in Malaysia is still scarce. More local data is still required because rainfall and runoff generation processes in tropical environment are very differe...

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Main Authors: Fai C.M., Bakar M.F.A., Sidek L.M., Khai W.J.
Other Authors: 57214146115
Format: Article
Published: Science Publishing Corporation Inc 2023
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Institution: Universiti Tenaga Nasional
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spelling my.uniten.dspace-239632023-05-29T14:53:34Z Investigating the plant species and rainfall factors on stormwater retention performance of extensive green roofs in Malaysia Fai C.M. Bakar M.F.A. Sidek L.M. Khai W.J. 57214146115 57199742143 35070506500 57211320170 Information on the influences of native plant species and rainfall characteristics on the stormwater retention performance of extensive green roofs in Malaysia is still scarce. More local data is still required because rainfall and runoff generation processes in tropical environment are very different from the temperate regions. This study is aimed to investigate the stormwater retention performance of native plant species in extensive green roofs with respect to different rainfall characteristics in Malaysia. Two test beds consist of promixing potting soil were vegetated each with different native plant species (Axonopus Compressus (cow grass), Portulaca Grandiflora (sedum) and one test bed with no vegetation (bare ground) was prepared as a control. A total of 22 significant storm events were collected over a 3-month period from March 2016 to May 2016. The rainfall depths for monitored storm events were ranged from 4.5 mm to 63.2 mm and rainfall intensities ranged from 0.5mm/hr to 58.5 mm/hr. The results showed that sedum exhibited higher mean runoff retention percentage than grass which is 75.8% and 70.9%, respectively. Bare soil was the least effective for reducing water runoff with retention percentage of 62.6%. Overall, sedum and grass species provided 90.6% and 88.2% of cumulative rainfall retention in this study. The rainfall depth and intensity are correlated negatively with stormwater retention performance of green roofs. Meanwhile, longer dry weather period are likely to increase the water retention capacity of green roof. � 2018 Authors. Final 2023-05-29T06:53:34Z 2023-05-29T06:53:34Z 2018 Article 10.14419/ijet.v7i3.9.15279 2-s2.0-85070556644 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85070556644&doi=10.14419%2fijet.v7i3.9.15279&partnerID=40&md5=a0b07869fe0024ce4db9b3598ffaf9ec https://irepository.uniten.edu.my/handle/123456789/23963 7 3 71 74 All Open Access, Bronze, Green Science Publishing Corporation Inc Scopus
institution Universiti Tenaga Nasional
building UNITEN Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Tenaga Nasional
content_source UNITEN Institutional Repository
url_provider http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/
description Information on the influences of native plant species and rainfall characteristics on the stormwater retention performance of extensive green roofs in Malaysia is still scarce. More local data is still required because rainfall and runoff generation processes in tropical environment are very different from the temperate regions. This study is aimed to investigate the stormwater retention performance of native plant species in extensive green roofs with respect to different rainfall characteristics in Malaysia. Two test beds consist of promixing potting soil were vegetated each with different native plant species (Axonopus Compressus (cow grass), Portulaca Grandiflora (sedum) and one test bed with no vegetation (bare ground) was prepared as a control. A total of 22 significant storm events were collected over a 3-month period from March 2016 to May 2016. The rainfall depths for monitored storm events were ranged from 4.5 mm to 63.2 mm and rainfall intensities ranged from 0.5mm/hr to 58.5 mm/hr. The results showed that sedum exhibited higher mean runoff retention percentage than grass which is 75.8% and 70.9%, respectively. Bare soil was the least effective for reducing water runoff with retention percentage of 62.6%. Overall, sedum and grass species provided 90.6% and 88.2% of cumulative rainfall retention in this study. The rainfall depth and intensity are correlated negatively with stormwater retention performance of green roofs. Meanwhile, longer dry weather period are likely to increase the water retention capacity of green roof. � 2018 Authors.
author2 57214146115
author_facet 57214146115
Fai C.M.
Bakar M.F.A.
Sidek L.M.
Khai W.J.
format Article
author Fai C.M.
Bakar M.F.A.
Sidek L.M.
Khai W.J.
spellingShingle Fai C.M.
Bakar M.F.A.
Sidek L.M.
Khai W.J.
Investigating the plant species and rainfall factors on stormwater retention performance of extensive green roofs in Malaysia
author_sort Fai C.M.
title Investigating the plant species and rainfall factors on stormwater retention performance of extensive green roofs in Malaysia
title_short Investigating the plant species and rainfall factors on stormwater retention performance of extensive green roofs in Malaysia
title_full Investigating the plant species and rainfall factors on stormwater retention performance of extensive green roofs in Malaysia
title_fullStr Investigating the plant species and rainfall factors on stormwater retention performance of extensive green roofs in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the plant species and rainfall factors on stormwater retention performance of extensive green roofs in Malaysia
title_sort investigating the plant species and rainfall factors on stormwater retention performance of extensive green roofs in malaysia
publisher Science Publishing Corporation Inc
publishDate 2023
_version_ 1806428075347410944