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Proposal For Urban Forest Health Monitoring in The United States

Reference Type
Conference Proceedings (Chapter)

"Urban areas cover approximately 3.5% of the total land area of the coterminous United States, contain more than 75% of the U.S. population, and support about 3.8 billion trees. Yet little is known about the status of the forest resource in these areas or how it is changing. This paper details a proposal to create a national urban forest health monitoring program within the USDA Forest Service’s Forest Health Monitoring Program that would establish an estimated 11,735 permanent urban plots nationwide. These plots would be resampled on an annualized 5- or 7-year cycle in the East and on a 10-year cycle in the West. Annual reports would provide current information on urban forest health, structure, and functions, and associated monetary values for each state/region and the nation. The information gathered on urban forest characteristics, particularly rates of change, would provide essential information for managing the urban forest resource and improving forest health in urban areas."

Authors
D.J. Nowak, D. Twardus, C.T. Scott
Date Published
2004
Journal/Conference
2000 Society of American Foresters National Conference Proceedings
Publisher
Society of American Foresters
Publisher Location
Washington, DC
Start Page
178
End Page
183
Pages
6
Sub-Topics
Forest Health, Inventory (forest), Inventory (tree), Urban Forest Management
State(s)/Region(s)
National
Keywords
FHM, FIA, Forest Health Monitoring, UFORE
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