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US Urban Forest Statistics, Values, and Projections
Author(s) -
David J. Nowak,
Eric J. Greenfield
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of forestry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.636
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1938-3746
pISSN - 0022-1201
DOI - 10.1093/jofore/fvx004
Subject(s) - geography , forestry , environmental science , urban forest , environmental protection , agricultural economics , economics
U.S. urban land increased from 2.6% (57.9 million acres) in 2000 to 3.0% (68.0 million acres) in 2010. States with the greatest amount of urban growth were in the South/Southeast (TX, FL, NC, GA and SC). Between 2010 and 2060, urban land is projected to increase another 95.5 million acres to 163.1 million acres (8.6%) with 18 states projected to have an increase of over 2 million acres. Overall, there are an estimated 5.5 billion trees (39.4% tree cover) in urban areas nationally that contain 127 million acres of leaf area and 44 million tons of dry-weight leaf biomass. Annually, these trees produce a total of $18.3 billion in value related to air pollution removal ($5.4 billion), reduced building energy use ($5.4 billion), carbon sequestration ($4.8 billion) and avoided pollutant emissions ($2.7 billion). States with greatest annual urban forest values were: Florida ($1.9 billion), California ($1.4 billion), Pennsylvania ($1.1 billion), New York ($1.0 billion) and Ohio ($971 million).

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