Skip to Main Content
Home >> Learn >> Trees

Trees

Long Leaf Pine Restoration

Once covering 90 million acres, long leaf pine forests now cover only a few million acres. The decline of the long leaf pine has implications that reach to the survival of a variety of plant and animal species, including those on the Threatened and Endangered Species List. The Forest Service is part of a partnership working to restore the long leaf pine forest.

Benefits of trees

elm tree

Trees work for us. Properly cared for, they are valuable assets worth three times your initial investment. Healthy trees mean: 

  • Healthy people: 100 trees remove 53 tons of carbon dioxide and 430 pounds of other air pollutants per year.
  • Healthy communities: Tree-filled neighborhoods lower levels of domestic violence and are safer and more sociable.
  • Healthy environment: One hundred mature trees catch about 139,000 gallons of rainwater per year.
  • Homeowner savings: Strategically placed trees save up to 56 percent on annual air-conditioning costs. Evergreens that block winter winds can save 3 percent on heating.
  • Better business: Consumers shop more frequently and longer in tree-lined commercial areas and are willing to spend more.
  • Higher property values: Each large front yard tree adds to a home’s sale price.

 

 

 

 

What is harming our trees

beetle bark

The exit holes in the ponderosa pine tell a story of bark beetles that have destroyed millions of trees on and beyond national forests and grasslands. Extended drought, warmer winters and aging forests helped to trigger the epidemic, although beetle epidemics are part of a natural process that cycles over time. Read about other threats:

 

 

 

Tree Tips
A photo of a Forest Service employee planting a sapling

Skip to Main Content
Jump to Top of Page