Climate change and physical activity: Ambient temperature and urban trail use in Texas

Individuals in the USA are insufficiently active, increasing their chronic disease risk. Extreme temperatures may reduce physical activity due to thermal discomfort. Cooler climate studies have suggested climate change may have a net positive effect on physical activity, yet research gaps remain for warmer climates and within-day physical activity patterns. We determined the association between ambient temperatures (contemporary and projected) and urban trail use in a humid subtropical climate. At a trail in Austin, TX, five electronic counters recorded hourly pedestrian and cyclist counts in 2019. Weather data were acquired from World Weather Online. Generalized additive models estimated the association between temperature and trail counts. We then combined the estimated exposure-response relation with weather projections from climate models for intermediate (RCP4.5) and high (RCP8.5) emissions scenarios by NASA NEX-GDDP. From summer to autumn to spring to winter, hourly trail counts shifted from bimodal (mid-morning and early-evening peaks) to one mid-day peak. Pedestrians were more likely to use the trail between 7 and 27 degrees C (45-81 degrees F) with peak use at 17 degrees C (63 degrees F) and cyclists between 15 and 33 degrees C (59-91 degrees F) with peak use at 27 degrees C (81 degrees F) than at temperature extremes. A net decrease in trail use was estimated by 2041-2060 (RCP4.5: pedestrians = -4.5%, cyclists = - 1.1%; RCP8.5: pedestrians = - 6.6%, cyclists = - 1.6%) and 2081-2100 (RCP4.5: pedestrians= -7.5%, cyclists= - 1.9%; RCP8.5: pedestrians= - 16%, cyclists= -4.5%). Results suggest climate change may reduce trail use. We recommend interventions for thermal comfort at settings for physical activity.

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Author Lanza, Kevin
Gohlke, Julia
Wang, Suwei
Sheffield, Perry E.
Wilhelmi, Olga
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2022-05-27T00:00:00
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Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2023-08-18T18:37:27.923402
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:25592
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Lanza, Kevin, Gohlke, Julia, Wang, Suwei, Sheffield, Perry E., Wilhelmi, Olga. (2022). Climate change and physical activity: Ambient temperature and urban trail use in Texas. UCAR/NCAR - Library. http://n2t.net/ark:/85065/d7hq43pr. Accessed 05 February 2025.

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