Trees clean the air. Tree
foliage works as a natural air filter of particulate matter such as dust, micro
sized metals and pollutants such as ozone, nitrogen oxides, ammonia and sulfur
dioxides. Trees take in carbon dioxide and produce oxygen. Combined with the
cooling effect of trees, these processes can have a significant impact on
reducing smog and overall air pollution.
Trees improve water quality. A healthy urban forest can have a
strong influence on our region’s water quality. Tree canopies and root systems
slow and reduce storm water runoff, flooding and erosion. Trees also help
filter water runoff reducing potential sources of water pollution into our
rivers and storm drains.
Trees save energy. Trees cool the air naturally in two ways:
through water evaporating from the leaves and direct shade. Homes shaded by
trees need less energy for cooling which means lower monthly utility bills in
summer and a reduced need for utilities to increase power generation to meet
peak load demand.
Trees raise real estate value. Shaded neighborhoods and
well-landscaped yards have a positive economic influence on real estate values,
timeliness of house sales and neighborhood desirability. Studies report that
landscaping speeds the sale of a home by four to six weeks.
From: www.sactree.com
Trees are good for business. A series of studies has
investigated associations between the urban forest and people’s response to
shopping settings. Scientific results suggest that having trees in the business
district streetscape is an important investment for a business community. The
presence of a quality urban forest positively influences shoppers' perceptions,
and probably, their behavior.
From: http://www.cfr.washington.edu/research.envmind/consumer.html
Trees help stop inner city
violence. A scientific study by the Human-Environment Research Lab
has demonstrated that contact with nature may actually help reduce the
incidence of aggression and violence in inner-city neighborhoods. According to
this study, levels of aggression were significantly lower among people who had
some kind of nature outside of their apartments versus those who didn't. The
impact of the physical environment on human aggression has been
well-established - crowding, high temperatures, and noise have all been linked
to violent behavior. Some scientists believe that it's because people living
under these conditions suffer from something called chronic mental fatigue,
which can make them inattentive, irritable, and impulsive - all of which can be
linked to aggressive behavior. Exposure to green spaces, it has been shown, can
mitigate the harmful effects of chronic mental fatigue, reducing aggressive
behavior in the process.
From: http://www.sactree.com/ruff/ufrf96/RUFRHome.html
What is “the urban forest”?
Trees that grow in cities and towns are
called “the urban forest”. Trees are major capital assets in cities across the
United States. Just as streets, sidewalks, public buildings and recreational
facilities are a part of a community's infrastructure, so are publicly owned
trees. Trees -- and, collectively, the urban forest -- are important assets
that require care and maintenance the same as other public property. Trees are
on the job 24 hours every day working for all of us to improve our environment
and quality of life. Life is hard for these trees because of limited space,
water, nutrients and extensive pavement covering the soil all around them. Many
trees get cut down because their roots crack the pavement as they seek water
and nutrients. The urban forest (and its many benefits) will disappear unless
people stand up for these trees and work to plant, maintain and steward them.
Conscious urban forestry needs to become integrated into the agenda of all city
governments and city planners.
To learn more about Urban Forests please click here Networx
What is the value of a tree?
A tree can return up to $2.70 for each
$1 on community investment…that’s a 270% return (based on a 40 year average
life span according to Center for Urban Forest Research, Pacific Southwest
Research Station, U.S. Forest Service, Davis, CA)
-
Four trees planted around a home can save up to 30% on summer cooling costs.
-
One million trees save $10 million a year in energy costs.
-
Forty trees remove 80 pounds of air pollutants annually.
-
Four million trees can save $20 million in air pollution clean up.
-
Four hundred trees capture 140,000 gallons of rainwater annually.
-
Four million trees save $14 million dollars in annual storm water runoff costs.
-
Trees in commercial parking lots induce shoppers to spend 11% more for goods
and services.
From: www.sactree.com
-
Shade from trees could save up to $175 per year (per structure) in air
conditioning costs. -Dr. Lowell Ponte
-
Trees can boost the market value of your home by an average of 6 or 7 percent.
-Dr. Lowell Ponte
-
Healthy, mature trees add an average of 10 percent to a property's value. -USDA
Forest Service
-
Landscaping, especially with trees, can increase property values as much as 20
percent. -Management Information Services/ICMA
-
The net cooling effect of a young, healthy tree is equivalent to ten room-size
air conditioners operating 20 hours a day. -U.S. Department of Agriculture
-
Nationally, the 60 million street trees have an average value of $525 per tree.
-Management Information Services
From: http://www.treelink.org
-
A tree, over a 50-year period, will generate $31,250 worth of oxygen, provide
$62,000 worth of air pollution control, and recycle $37,500 worth of water.
From: http://www.arborday.org/trees/benefits.cfm
Case studies on trees and the bottom line
The primary purpose of a study Quantifying
Benefits and Costs of Santa Monica's Urban Forest was to find out
if the accrued benefits from Santa Monica's urban forest justify an annual
municipal budget that exceeds $1.5 million. Results indicate that the benefits
residents obtain from Santa Monica's urban forest exceed management costs by
nearly $1 million. Santa Monica has invested millions of dollars in its
municipal forest, and citizens are now receiving a relatively large return on
that investment, such as increased property values, enhanced scenic beauty, air
pollutant uptake, cooling and heating savings, lower summertime temperatures,
and reduced stormwater retention.
A study of urban forests in Modesto, CA shows that for each $1
invested in urban forest management, $1.89 in benefits is returned to
residents. City trees actually remove 154 tons of air pollutants, increase
property values by over $1.5 million, and provide shade that saves over $1
million. This information convinced city officials to increase the tree budget
and an electric utility company to invest $20,000 in developing the Modesto
Tree Foundation.
http://cufr.ucdavis.edu/
Interesting
Facts
In Milwaukee, where
urban trees cover about 16 per cent of the city, trees reduce stormwater flows
by 22 per cent. The city saves an estimated $15.4 million by avoiding the
construction of additional retention capacity. In Austin, heavy rains make
stormwater management a priority issue. Austin's tree canopy, almost twice that
of Milwaukee's at approximately 30 per cent, reduced stormwater flow by 28 per
cent, providing the city with an estimated $122 million in savings (MacDonald,
1996). |
Several
investigators have documented dramatic (30 - 50%) differences in cooling-energy
use between houses on landscaped and un-landscaped sites (Akbari, 2002).
|
Hurricane Hugo
devastated Charleston, South Carolina, in 1989. Little was spared: homes,
churches, power lines, and the urban forest were all heavily damaged or
destroyed. 200 residents were asked to identify the single most special
physical feature of Charleston damaged or destroyed by Hugo. People identified
the urban forest more often than any other aspect of Charleston ( i.e. more
than churches, historic buildings or homes) (Vigo, 1990). |
Computer
simulations using standard building and tree configurations for cities across
the U.S. indicate that shade from a single well-placed, mature tree (about
25-ft crown diameter) reduces annual air conditioning use 2 to 8 percent and
peak cooling demand 2 to 10 percent (Simpson and McPherson, 1996). |
A major study of
Chicago estimated that trees in that city annually removed 15 metric tons of
carbon monoxide, 84 tons of sulfur dioxide, 89 tons of nitrogen dioxide, 191
tons of ozone, and 212 tons of small particulates. The estimated value of this
pollution removal was $1 million for trees in the city itself and $9.2 million
for the entire Chicago area (Nowak, 1994). |
The
ambient air temperature difference between an urban heat island and a vegetated
area can be as much as 2-10 degrees F. The temperature measured directly above
man-made surfaces can be as much as 25 degrees F hotter than the air
temperature beneath a forested area (Akbari et. al., 1992; Simpson and
McPherson, 1996). |
Using the city of
Davis, California as a model, existing data on the benefits and costs of
municipal trees were applied to the results of a sample inventory of the city’s
public and private street trees. Results indicate that Davis maintained nearly
24,000 public street trees that provided $1.2 million in net annual
environmental and property value benefits, with a benefit–cost ratio of 3.8:1
(Maco and McPherson, 2003). |
From: http://www.treelink.org
|
One
acre of forest absorbs six tons of carbon dioxide and puts out four tons of
oxygen. This is enough to meet the annual needs of 18 people. -U.S. Department
of Agriculture |
There are about 60-to
200- million spaces along our city streets where trees could be planted. This
translates to the potential to absorb 33 million more tons of CO2 every year,
and saving $4 billion in energy costs. -National Wildlife Federation |
Trees
properly placed around buildings can reduce air conditioning needs by 30
percent and can save 20 - 50 percent in energy used for heating. -USDA Forest
Service |
Trees can be a stimulus
to economic development, attracting new business and tourism. Commercial retail
areas are more attractive to shoppers, apartments rent more quickly, tenants
stay longer, and space in a wooded setting is more valuable to sell or rent.
-The National Arbor Day Foundation |
The
planting of trees means improved water quality, resulting in less runoff and
erosion. This allows more recharging of the ground water supply. Wooded areas
help prevent the transport of sediment and chemicals into streams. -USDA Forest
Service |
In laboratory research,
visual exposure to settings with trees has produced significant recovery from
stress within five minutes, as indicated by changes in blood pressure and
muscle tension. -Dr. Roger S. Ulrich Texas A&M University |
A tree
can grow to manufacture five pounds of pure oxygen per day, consume carbon
dioxide to fight the "greenhouse effect" that threatens our survival,
and provide the cooling equivalent of ten room-size air conditioning units.
|
| From: http://www.arborday.org/trees/benefits.cfm |
|
LINKS
TreeLink: The Urban Forestry Resource
- http://www.treelink.org/
A fabulous source for information and networking about urban trees that offers
a search engine to find specific information from over 2000 resources. It has a
fun format with changing tree factoids, tree care tips, a tutorial on applying
for grants and a Kid’s Corner.
TreeLink New York -
http://www.treelink.org/linx/?navLocationRef=33
Center for Urban Forest Research, Pacific Southwest Research Station, UC
Davis - http://cufr.ucdavis.edu
This is the most comprehensive and well-researched web resource. It offers
helpful online presentations, Powerpoint presentations and handbooks designed
to persuade local elected leaders to value the urban forest. The Center is in
the process of developing easy-to-use computer programs to help communities
assess the benefits of street trees and help homeowners evaluate the economic
trade-offs of different landscape choices.
Sacramento Tree Foundation - http://www.sactree.com
Resources, information and news for the Central California region. Offers
download of free NeighborWoods Guide handbook. Includes Sacramento Regional
Urban Forest Framework for elected leaders with link to helpful Tree Toolkit.
University of Washington, College of Forest Resources, Research Programs
- http://www.cfr.washington.edu/research.envmind/
Lots of hard facts about the financial and social benefits of trees in cities
from research projects by Kathleen L. Wolf, Ph.D. This is a good source of
ammunition for convincing skeptics who will only look at the bottom line.
Trees New York - http://www.treesny.com/index.html
News and information specifically for the five boroughs and surrounding region.
Virginia State University, Virginia Cooperative Extension -
http://www.ext.vt.edu/pubs/trees/430-028/430-028.html
Specific detailed information about landscaping with trees for parking lots and
paved areas.
The National Arbor Day
Foundation - http://www.arborday.org/Index.cfm
Everything you ever wanted to know about specific trees. Site includes online
tree identification guides, great graphic presentations about the benefits of
trees, a store for purchasing climate/region specific trees and information
about the Tree City USA program. You can even get 10 free trees by joining the
National Arbor Day Foundation.
Society of Municipal Arborists -
http://www.urban-forestry.com/
Browse the online issues of City Trees magazine and check out the helpful list
of links.
Colorado Tree Coalition -
http://www.coloradotrees.org/benefits.htm
Offers detailed articles on benefits of trees.
E: The Environmental Magazine -
http://www.enn.com/news/2004-08-31/s_26621.asp
Article on “Do urban trees really help reduce pollution and clean air?”,
Tuesday, August 31, 2004
American Forests.org - http://www.americanforests.org/
To add your tree-related link to this page, please email us at
Rubbersidewalks@aol.com.
All photos on this page were provided by
Walter Warriner
Consulting Arborist
|