“…Related studies have addressed factors that influence residents' participation in TPIs (Locke et al, 2015;Hand et al, 2019), and how such participation influences urban tree canopy patterns (Locke and Morgan Grove, 2014). Others have assessed links between TPIs, canopy cover, income, race, and ethnicity (Watkins et al, 2017), as well as links to residential energy use (Nelson et al, 2012;Ko et al, 2015b;Erker and Townsend, 2019), carbon sequestration and hydrology (Pincetl et al, 2013), carbon life cycle (McPherson and Kendall, 2014), and emission of biogenic volatile organic compounds (Curtis et al, 2014). Of note, numerous studies have assessed the tree survival rates of TPIs and associated links to biophysical and sociopolitical factors (Oldfield et al, 2013;Koeser et al, 2014;Mincey and Vogt, 2014;Roman et al, 2014;Ko et al, 2015a;Roman et al, 2015;Vogt et al, 2015a,b;Widney et al, 2016;Blair et al, 2019;Breger et al, 2019).…”