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Increase the extent of forest cover within urban areas

Approach

Urban forests include developed sites adjacent to streets and buildings, open spaces in parks, residential areas, and schools, as well as natural areas designated as preserves and large urban parks. Urban forestry can be an important mechanism for increasing stored carbon as trees in urban areas can have significant biomass and carbon sequestration. Carbon sequestration rates in individual trees within urban areas can exceed those in natural forests due to greater foliar biomass and reduced competition from lower tree densities, as well as irrigation and fertilization—and a changing climate may be further accelerating these growth rates in urban areas. Trees can have an additional important influence on carbon mitigation in urban zones by reducing the energy requirements for building heating in winter due to wind protection and summer cooling from tree shading.

Tactics

  • “Greening” areas that currently have low canopy cover by adding street trees and other vegetation.
  • Strategic planting of trees to provide building shading or cooling benefits.
  • Creation of parks and green spaces on abandoned or underutilized spaces, such as brownfields.
  • Integration of trees as part of low-impact development or stormwater runoff projects.

Strategy

Strategy Text

Carbon stocks often reach their highest density in forested ecosystems compared to other ecosystem types or land uses. Actions that maintain the integrity of forested ecosystems or re-establish forest cover can have some of the most significant benefits for maintaining carbon in both above- and belowground pools, as well as improving the ability of the ecosystems to sequester carbon into the future. This strategy seeks to sustain or enhance carbon stocks at broad spatial scales through maintaining forest vegetation, increasing forest stocking, or re-establishing forest cover on non-forested lands.

Todd A Ontl, Maria K Janowiak, Christopher W Swanston, Jad Daley, Stephen Handler, Meredith Cornett, Steve Hagenbuch, Cathy Handrick, Liza Mccarthy, Nancy Patch, Forest Management for Carbon Sequestration and Climate Adaptation, Journal of Forestry, Volume 118, Issue 1, January 2020, Pages 86–101, https://doi.org/10.1093/jofore/fvz062

RELATED TO THIS APPROACH:

Resource Area

Relevant Region

Midwest
Northeast