News Release

Trees provide big savings for every dollar invested by increasing property values, saving energy

Book Announcement

USDA Forest Service - Pacific Southwest Research Station

Street Trees

image: Trees beautify a neighborhood, increasing property values and creating a more sociable environment. view more 

Credit: USDA Forest Service, Center for Urban Forest Research

BERKELEY, Calif. April 29, 2010. Trees can provide beauty and shade in urban areas, but they also can improve air quality, conserve energy, reduce carbon emissions, and filter storm water. A new publication released by the Pacific Southwest (PSW) Research Station/USDA Forest Service can help residents along the northern California coast to calculate these benefits.

The "Northern California Coast Community Tree Guide: Benefits, Costs, and Strategic Planting," is the latest in a series of Forest Service publications that help people to quantify the tangible and intangible benefits of urban forests. It is a joint product of the station's Center for Urban Forest Research and the University of California, Davis.

"The northern California coast, which includes the area between Brookings, Ore., and San Luis Obispo, Calif., accounts for the largest proportion of total benefits to residents, businesses, and communities," explains Greg McPherson, lead author and station research forester. "We used measurements gathered through in-depth research of urban trees in Berkeley to model the annual benefits produced by tree species of certain sizes and we compared maintenance costs, like planting and irrigation, to benefits."

McPherson and his colleagues' results show that the quantity of the average annual net benefits increases with tree size—large-stature trees, for example, produce the highest benefit-to-cost ratio. His research team also found that, over a 40-year period, 100 large street trees provided $516,800 in benefits, far outweighing their $113,400 maintenance costs. The net benefit was $403,400; or for every dollar spent on tree management, residents receive $4.56 in benefits.

"This tree guide can easily be adopted for use by people in communities in this climate zone to calculate future benefits from proposed and existing tree planting projects," says McPherson. "It also gives advice on strategic selection and location of trees to maximize benefits."

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The research information and findings are integrated in "i-Tree Streets," a free software program, which is now used by more than 5,700 people worldwide. The software combines tree inventory, benefit, and cost data to report on the structure, function, and value of municipal forests. To download i-Tree, visit http://www.itreetools.org.

To download a copy of the "Northern California Coast Community Tree Guide: Benefits, Costs, and Strategic Planting," visit http://www.fs.fed.us/psw/programs/cufr/tree_guides. Or, write to PSW Research Station; Publications Distribution; 240 West Prospect Road; Fort Collins, CO 80526-2089. To order by phone, call (970) 498-1392 and ask for "PSW-GTR-228." Contact: Greg McPherson, research forester, phone: (530) 759-1723; e-mail: gmcpherson@fs.fed.us The Pacific Southwest Research Station/USDA Forest Service, is headquartered in Albany, California. The station develops and communicates science needed to sustain forest ecosystems and their benefits to society. It has laboratories and research centers in California, Hawaii, and the U.S.-affiliated Pacific Islands.


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