Nevada
Las Vegas metro area could be the biggest winner when it comes to potential cooling power of trees • Nevada Current
Researchers found Las Vegas was the worst offender in the study in terms of the number of trees planted compared to the number of superheating man-made surfaces like buildings, roads, and sidewalks. (Photo: Ronda Churchill/Nevada Current)
Las Vegas is heating up faster than almost every other American city, but a new multi-year study may provide local governments some direction for effective heat relief.
According to a study published by the U.S. Geological Survey last week, Las Vegas and other cities in hotter drier regions may be the biggest winners when it comes to the cooling effect trees can provide in sizzling temperatures.
In eight large cities across the country, scientists placed 80-100 sensors on trees in each city and measured hourly air temperatures for three months during the summers of 2016 to 2019. The study found that urban trees in arid cities amplified the cooling of local air temperature significantly more than in more humid locations.
The study covered Baltimore, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Portland, Miami, Tucson, Denver and Las Vegas.
“We found that trees in every city are reducing air temperature. But we did find that the hotter and drier the city, the greater the magnitude of that cooling power was,” said Peter Ibsen, USGS research ecologist and the study’s lead researcher.
For example, in humid Miami, researchers found that trees cooled the surrounding air temperatures by about 2 degrees C, while trees in the Las Vegas metro area accounted for a 7 degree C cooling effect. The study measured cooling effects over a 60-meter buffer around each tree, indicating a broader impact of tree canopy on air temperature.
“Trees, when you put up them all over the whole city, they have this larger effect of being able to reduce air temperature at the neighborhood scale,” Ibsen said.
Tree’s in hotter, dryer cities like Las Vegas also consistently mitigated air temperature increases during periods of extreme heat, meaning trees can substantially alter residents’ exposure to extreme heat in urban areas.
“We’re seeing a ton of cooling coming from trees in Las Vegas. And when we did a whole model accounting for heat waves in Las Vegas, that cooling effect increased during heat waves as well,” Ibsen said.
Average summertime temperatures in Las Vegas have increased by 5.8 degrees F since 1970, ranking as the second fastest-warming city in the US.
Extreme heat waves in Southern Nevada have exacerbated heat-related hospitalizations and deaths year-after-year. Last year, Clark County reported more than 300 heat-related deaths. In 2024, the county said heat was a factor in more than 400 deaths.
Las Vegas recorded its hottest temperature ever — 120 degrees F— on July 7, 2024. That same day, the youngest person in Clark County to die of a heat stroke was a 27-year old man, according to the Clark County coroner. The second hottest day ever recorded in Las Vegas — 119 degrees F — happened two days later, where the youngest person to die of heat stroke was a 28-year old man.
Heat related deaths are often associated with the sick and elderly, but at a certain temperature the human body can’t withstand extreme heat, and neither a person’s state of fitness nor their levels of hydration can protect them from heat damage.
Finding trees that aren’t ‘all in parks’
Human-caused climate change has turbocharged heat all over the country, but it’s most intense in cities. That’s because buildings, roads and sidewalks radiate more heat than grass and trees, in what’s known as the urban heat island effect.
Researchers found Las Vegas was the worst offender in the study in terms of the number of trees planted compared to the number of superheating man-made surfaces. Only about 9% of the Las Vegas metro area is covered by tree canopy, while impervious surfaces — buildings, roads and sidewalks — covered nearly 50% of the area. Those trees were also rarely planted near those superheated surfaces.
Ibsen said researchers in the Las Vegas area had to install sensors across the largest area of any other city studied compared to its size due to a widespread lack of trees.
“To get around 80 to 100 sensors up, we needed to find 80 to 100 trees that are also not necessarily all in parks,” Ibsen said. “There’s not that many places in Las Vegas where you can find that.”
However, researchers found that even in sweltering cities with sprawling concrete networks, trees were able to effectively mitigate heat and cool air temperatures significantly in arid regions.
“It’s not that the areas are getting colder during heat waves, but trees are able to cap that increase. So downtown may increase by like 12 degrees, but areas with trees may only increase by 8 degrees. And we didn’t find that in every city,” Ibsen said.
Ibsen says trees function in surprisingly similar ways to the human body, pumping water through their leaves to cool down, the same way a human sweats to cool down. That water vapor then cools the air surrounding the tree. In humid environments, the air is already full of water vapor, so water doesn’t evaporate as quickly or cool as effectively.
“In really arid cities, there’s more water getting pumped out of the soil by trees. So we get this bonus cooling effect, in addition to shade that we don’t see in the more humid cities,” Ibsen said.
Grass did not have the same large-scale cooling effect as trees, especially in arid conditions, according to the study. The lack of shade provided by grass and its proximity to the ground makes grass especially inefficient at cooling surrounding air temperatures.
“Unlike grass, a tree can cool things off in multiple directions and at different levels of height as well,” Ibsen said.
Ibsen said he hopes local agencies and municipalities will work with the data from their research to create better urban planning.
Time for a water schedule rethink?
However, researchers warn that maintaining trees in an urban setting requires irrigation. The study also found that several tree species could not survive intensifying heat waves and existing water restrictions, resulting in leaf death. Cities should invest in well-trained urban foresters that can select the right species of trees that can withstand extreme heat, Ibsen said.
The City of Las Vegas is working on establishing an expansive urban canopy across urban areas, but that work is more complicated than just planting more trees, said Steven Glimp, a board certified arborist, and the city’s manager of parks and urban forestry.
“To get around 80 to 100 sensors up, we needed to find 80 to 100 trees that are also not necessarily all in parks… There’s not that many places in Las Vegas where you can find that.”
– Peter Ibsen, U.S. Geological Survey
The city aims to plant 2,500 to 3,000 trees annually, focusing on areas with the greatest heat island effect, including downtown, the Historic Westside, and parts of council wards one, three, and five in the southeast portion of the city’s boundaries.
Glimp said planting trees in built environments with hardscapes is challenging due to compacted soil degraded by concrete and asphalt. The city has implemented innovative soil volume strategies since 2016, including soil cells and engineered soil-mixes to provide better oxygen and space for tree roots.
Less adaptive species first planted in Las Vegas are also failing in the midst of higher temperatures and water restrictions.
“This year, we did see an increase in mortality with some old school species. The mortality rate was much higher this year, because species are starting to fail in these really hot summers,” Glimp said.
Lack of irrigation can also be an issue. The Southern Nevada Water Authority four-season watering schedule doesn’t always align with the reality of summer heat, including this year when 100-plus degree weather continued well into the fall, said Glimp. But more resilient species should be able to handle less frequent irrigation.
“We’re planting species that could basically survive on our existing rainfall. Once established, after a few years being irrigated, they could survive extended drought,” Glimp said.
Resilient tree species, including native and non-native varieties, are being planted throughout the city to enhance urban canopy diversity. The city also promotes these species to local nurseries and landscapers to increase availability for homeowners looking to cool their homes and neighborhoods.
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Nevada
Caltech readies to build world’s most sensitive radio telescope in Nevada
LAS VEGAS (FOX5) — Caltech researchers are preparing to build a radio telescope that will be the most sensitive ever constructed and survey the sky 100 times faster than any other radio telescope worldwide.
Schmidt Sciences has greenlit construction of the Deep Synoptic Array after the project completed its final design review. The milestone paves the way for construction to begin on the telescope, which is planned for a remote valley in Nevada.
MORE ON FOX5: Conservation groups oppose potential sale of federal lands highlighted in land mapping tool
The array will consist of 1,650 radio dishes, each slightly more than 6 meters in diameter. The array will span an area of about 20 by 16 kilometers. The team plans to build the telescope by 2029, with science operations commencing soon after.
Survey capabilities
“The DSA will survey the entire visible sky several times in its first five years at unprecedented speeds,” said Gregg Hallinan, principal investigator of DSA, professor of astronomy at Caltech, and director of Caltech’s Owens Valley Radio Observatory. “While all other radio telescopes combined have so far found about 20 million radio sources, the DSA will match that in the first day of operations. By the end of its initial survey, it will have discovered about 1 billion new radio sources.”
The telescope will discover radio emission from millions of stars, galaxies, and other cosmic objects. It will address the mysteries of black holes, pulsars and fast radio bursts. It will also probe the physics of dark matter and gravity, and it will measure the structure and expansion of the universe.
“Radio astronomy is about to go from sketch to photograph,” said Vikram Ravi, the co-principal investigator of the DSA and a professor of astronomy at Caltech. “The DSA is looking at a far larger volume of the universe far more often than any other telescope.”
Real-time imaging
The DSA will be capable of making images in real time. The numerous radio dishes will feed into a supercomputer that creates images instantly. The images will be immediately accessible to the worldwide astronomical community.
“Without the radio camera, we would have to store 100 exabytes of data to complete our survey,” Hallinan said. “This would require 5 million hard drives in a multi-billion-dollar facility the size of multiple football fields. The radio camera solves this problem.”
The DSA’s radio camera will convert the raw data to images in real time with the help of an off-site supercomputer built from Graphics Processing Units built by Nvidia. The radio camera images will be given freely to the public with no proprietary period.
“We want the whole world to also have access to the data just as quickly as we do,” said Katie Jameson, the DSA lead project manager.
The DSA will have the ability to detect more than 100,000 intensely powerful flashes of radio light from fast radio bursts and to localize them to their home galaxies. The DSA will also reveal more than 20,000 new pulsars.
“The science that can be done is endless,” Hallinan said. “There will be enough discoveries to occupy every radio astronomer on the planet.”
The DSA is led by Caltech and funded by Schmidt Sciences. It is part of the Eric and Wendy Schmidt Observatory System. Two pathfinder projects that led to the DSA, the DSA-110 and the OVRO Long Wavelength Array, were funded by the National Science Foundation.
Copyright 2026 KVVU. All rights reserved.
Nevada
Conservation groups oppose potential sale of federal lands highlighted in land mapping tool
LAS VEGAS (FOX5) — Conservation groups are pushing back against a new state mapping tool that identifies federal lands potentially available for development in Nevada.
The governor’s office, in partnership with the Bureau of Land Management Nevada, unveiled the interactive map this week to make it easier to find federal land that may be available for development throughout the state and in the Las Vegas Valley.
“It is shocking to look at the map and see how many lands could potentially be sold off,” said Olivia Tanager, executive director of the Sierra Club Toiyabe Chapter.
Tanager said she was surprised at how many federal lands were identified for disposal when she first looked at the map.
“Places like Red Rock and Sloan Canyon in Southern Nevada are what draw people to live in Southern Nevada. We cannot continue to develop right up onto the boundaries or perhaps even in these precious places,” Tanager said.
The conservation group says the mapping tool is the latest effort to treat Nevada’s public lands as a real estate inventory rather than a shared public resource.
“We know that a lot of these areas are environmentally sensitive. We know that there are endangered species on these lands,” Tanager said.
MORE ON FOX5: Nevada unveils interactive tool mapping federal lands available for possible development, other uses
Housing concerns
Lawmakers have proposed using federal lands to create more affordable housing. Several areas at the edges of the Vegas Valley have been identified for potential development on the mapping tool. Tanager said she does not see that as a viable solution.
“The areas on the outskirts or far outside of existing urban areas are wholly inappropriate for affordable housing. Housing that is located that far away from services will never be truly affordable,” Tanager said. “As folks have to live further and further away from resources like schools and grocery stores, transportation costs go up substantially.”
The conservation group says the valley should fill in open lots and build upward within the existing urban core instead of building outward.
“We know that sprawl and developing on the outskirts of the valley worsens air quality as well from increased transportation,” Tanager said. “We know that sprawl is incredibly water-intensive. The further out you build, the harder it is to recapture that water.”
The Sierra Club Toiyabe Chapter says treating federal lands as disposable assets could set a dangerous precedent that accelerates privatization efforts and undermines the principle that public lands should remain in public hands for future generations.
Approximately 85% of Nevada’s total land area is owned by the federal government.
The state says the tool is designed to bolster information sharing about federal lands. The mapping tool is available here.
Copyright 2026 KVVU. All rights reserved.
Nevada
WOW Carwash touts year-round water conservation with recycling tech in Southern Nevada
LAS VEGAS (KSNV) — In the desert climate of Southern Nevada, WOW Carwash says it is working year-round to conserve water and reduce its environmental impact, using a combination of water-reclamation technology, biodegradable soaps and energy-efficient equipment.
The Las Vegas-born company says washing a car at home uses roughly 100 gallons of water. By comparison, WOW says it uses about 30 gallons per vehicle and reclaims up to 80% of the water.
WOW says its water-reclamation system exceeds typical local requirements. While local car washes are only required to have one sand and oil separator, WOW says it has four, along with a mud tank and UV filters designed to recycle water, reduce daily water use and ensure no solids are sent to the sewer system.
The company says all water from a WOW Carwash enters a 1,500-gallon mud tank underground at each location to begin separating soils from the water. From there, WOW says the water passes through a series of four sand and oil separators, where oils float to the surface, and soils sink to the bottom. WOW says the cleaned water is then pumped through UV and micron filters to remove remaining contaminants so it can be recycled and reused in the car wash.
WOW also says it repurposes the dirt washed off vehicles. The company says its water-reclamation tanks are pumped regularly by licensed vacuum trucks to maintain efficiency, and what is pumped out is then utilized as fertilizer.
WOW says all cleaning agents used in its tunnel wash process are environmentally safe and biodegradable, and that the soaps are safe to the human touch and for a vehicle’s paint while still being tough on dirt. The company says the cleaning agents break down naturally, reducing harmful runoff that could otherwise flow into storm drains and local waterways.
To reduce its carbon footprint, WOW says it uses energy-efficient equipment, including Variable Frequency Drives that allow electric motors to “ramp down” when demand is low to reduce electricity use during operations.
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