36 Facts About Urban forestry

1.

Urban forestry is the care and management of single trees and tree populations in urban settings for the purpose of improving the urban environment.

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2.

Urban forestry involves both planning and management, including the programming of care and maintenance operations of the urban forest.

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3.

Urban forestry is practiced by municipal and commercial arborists, municipal and utility foresters, environmental policymakers, city planners, consultants, educators, researchers and community activists.

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4.

Urban forestry forests mitigate the effects of urban heat island through evapotranspiration and the shading of streets and buildings.

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5.

Urban forestry forests improve air quality by absorbing pollutants such as ozone, nitrogen dioxide, ammonia, and particulate matter as well as performing carbon sequestration.

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6.

Urban forestry can be an important tool for stormwater management as trees intercept rainwater in the canopy, and can slow down, filter and pump water back into the atmosphere via their roots.

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7.

Urban forestry has been shown to promote psychological healing, stress recovery, and to improve concentration and productivity.

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8.

Urban forestry wildlife is exposed to warmer temperatures as well as higher levels of pollution as cities alter the natural environment significantly.

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9.

Urban forestry wildlife is exposed to higher amounts of toxic substances, including heavy metals, road treatments, or pesticides from lawns that can lead to abnormal reproduction or development.

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10.

Urban forestry forests are essential to creating habitats for wildlife within cities, and many species have adapted to living in the disturbed conditions of the built environment by utilizing urban green-spaces.

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11.

Diseased trees provide decreased ecosystem services, making it important for urban forestry to be a part of the planning and management of the urban canopy.

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12.

Urban forestry forest provides habitat for many wildlife species, including song birds, squirrels and other small mammals, and insects.

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13.

Urban forestry areas provide and maintain a mosaic of diverse wildlife habitat to support existing and introduced fauna.

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14.

Urban forestry forest related events such as planting festivals can significantly reduce social isolation problems, enhance people's experience and raise environmental awareness.

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15.

Urban forestry forests encourage more active lifestyles by providing space for exercise and are associated with reduced stress and overall emotional well-being.

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16.

Urban forestry is a practical discipline, which includes tree planting, care, and protection, and the overall management of trees as a collective resource.

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17.

Management challenges for urban forestry include maintaining a tree and planting site inventory, quantifying and maximizing the benefits of trees, minimizing costs, obtaining and maintaining public support and funding, and establishing laws and policies for trees on public and on private land.

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18.

Higher education in urban forestry is a method of training for aspiring urban foresters.

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19.

Careers in urban forestry often require higher education that concentrates in urban forestry, arboriculture, forestry, horticulture, natural resource management, urban planning, and environmental science.

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20.

Urban forestry forests provide both ecosystem services and disservices that are considered prior to planning.

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21.

Urban forestry forests provide services such as improved air quality, noise reduction, temperature mitigation, and stormwater mitigation when they are placed in the right spot.

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22.

Urban forestry forest planning is used to maximize the benefits that trees provide by thoughtfully placing them in the best locations.

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23.

Urban forestry forest assessment is a strategy that is used within broader management and planning operations that allows urban foresters to better understand and care for the forest resource at hand.

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24.

Urban forestry planning and management methods are key to creating and maintaining an urban forest that produces sustainable benefits for the surrounding community.

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25.

Those researchers note that an urban forestry program is only as strong as its community support, and if the public does not see the urgency of climate change and understand the science behind the program's actions, then progress will be slow.

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26.

Urban forestry forests provide numerous environmental and health benefits to the people of Canada.

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27.

Urban forestry was a professor of Forest Pathology at the University of Toronto throughout the 1960s.

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28.

Urban forestry continued his career at the University of Toronto and his laboratory became increasingly devoted to shade tree research in Canada.

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29.

Urban forestry ended up leaving the university in 1973 to lead a National Urban Forestry program in Ottawa, Canada.

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30.

Urban forestry forests tend to be fairly irregular in age and tree placement, however general favor tends to be shown towards older trees.

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31.

Policy on urban forestry is less contentious and partisan than many other forestry issues, such as resource extraction in national forests.

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32.

Australian urban forestry involves the care and management of single trees and tree populations throughout urban Australia, ameliorating the livability of cities in the country.

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33.

Australia's urban forestry history includes three time periods of urban forestry efforts.

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34.

The first period, "forest in a city", refers to when urban forestry accompanied a resurgent focus on environmental values in the 1970s.

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35.

Australia's understanding of urban forestry evolved during the second time period to include all spaces used by the urban population.

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36.

The third and present period in Australia's urban forestry history is known as "city in a forest", and considers the ongoing efforts to include urban forestry as a solution to environmental and health problems.

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