Solutions for Trees: February 2008 Archives

February 2008 Archives

Inspecting Trees for Dangerous Defects

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Defective trees can cause personal injury and property damage. Hazard tree management has increased in recent years due to safety and liability concerns resulting from preventable accidents. A “hazard tree” is a tree with structural defects likely to cause failure of all or part of the tree, which could strike a “target.” A target can be a vehicle, building, or a place where people gather such as a park bench, picnic table, street, or backyard.

Inspecting Trees

Consider the items on this checklist when inspecting your trees:

  • Tree Condition: Poor conditions include many dead twigs, dead branches or small, off-color leaves. Good conditions include full crowns, vigorous branches, and healthy, full-sized leaves. But you need to look further...for the health of branches and trunks.
  • Tree Species can affect hazards because come tree species are prone to specific types of defects. For example aspen are prone to youthful breaks due to decay; some species of maple and ash can form weak branch unions.
  • Tree Age and Size are affected by constant stress. Older trees that have accumulated multiple defecs and extensive decay can be especially prone to damage.
Inspect your trees every year. A thorough inspection is easiest after leaf drop in the fall, and after leaf-out in spring. It's important to routinely inspect trees after every severe storm.

Look for dead wood, cracks, weak branch unions, decay, cankers, root problems, and poor tree architecture.

Corrective action provides some choices, depending on the problems. You can move the tree to a better location; prune the tree or remove the tree.

For more thorough guidelines on "Recognizing Hazardous Defects in Trees," check out this helpful and estensive on-line guidebook by the USDA Forest Service.

SOURCE: Forest Service: Recognize Hazardous Defects in Trees

PROBLEM: Danger and liability

SOLUTION: Regular inspection and care of your trees with pruning, cabling, bracing or tranpanting, or removal of the tree.

City heat island from greenhouse gas and global climate change Trees are the muscles of urban landscapes. They provide a wide array of benefits to individual homes, neighborhoods, and the city at large. A wide variety of trees -- from forests at the outskirts that absorb and filter pollutants -- to flowering dogwoods and climbing trees -- all add livability to urban living.

The hard working "tree" is even more important today, with our concerns about air quality and climate change. If you have room to plant a tree -- in a yard, on suburban or rural property, or even in a container on your deck -- you have the opportunity to contribute to the restoration of our natural forest-covered earth's natural air, water and soil system that is self-healing.

Trees reduce carbon dioxide in the air, thereby reducing the warming “greenhouse” effect of the gas, in two main ways. First, as they grow, they take carbon dioxide out of the air and transform it into roots, leaves, bark, flowers, and wood. Over the lifetime of a tree, several tons of carbon dioxide are taken up (McPherson and Simpson 1999). In fact, trees are the only known feasible way to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Even if we were able to switch immediately to fuel sources that do not emit carbon dioxide, the current levels in the air are higher than at any time in the past 400,000 years, according to the UN’s International Panel on Climate Change, and because of the long “lifetime” of carbon dioxide, will remain so for decades or even centuries.

Second, by providing shade and transpiring water, trees lower air temperature and, therefore, cut energy use, which reduces the production of carbon dioxide at the power plant. Two-thirds of the electricity produced in the United States is created by burning a fuel (coal, oil, or natural gas) that produces carbon dioxide–on average, for every kilowatt hour of electricity created, about 1.39 lbs of carbon dioxide is released (eGRID 2002). It is certainly true, as Dr. Duffy states, that not emitting carbon dioxide in the first place is a good strategy. Lowering summertime temperatures by planting trees in cities is one way to reduce energy use and thereby reduce carbon dioxide emissions.

SOURCE: Eco Preservation Society


PROBLEM: Urban heat contributes to climate change and air pollution

SOLUTION:  Plant and care for more trees -- and keep them healthy for longterm maturity.  Mature trees provide more benefits than young trees.


In 2005 Lawrence Livermore Laboratory and Carnegie Institution produced a study that concluded that reforestation has limited value in efforts to decelerate the warming of the planet.

Reforestation is not only a “viable option”; it is our “only option”. Investing in future technologies to reduce emissions does NOTHING to remove the CO2 that we have already dumped into the atmosphere. There is only ONE viable and proven way to remove CO2 from the atmosphere and that is through the growth of trees and vegetation.
SOURCE: EcoPreservation Society

The Eco Prservation Society feels strongly to the contrary -- they find that a long-term effort at sequestering carbon is vital and that reforestation is the only means presently at our disposal.

By the study’s author’s own admission, the Lawrence Livermore study was predicated on an unrealistic scenario. The modeling was based on the single metric of replacing 100% of ALL grasslands and 100% of ALL croplands with evergreen trees! The modeling techniques did not take into account geological variations, topographical variations, altitude, regional weather patterns or microclimates. What the Lawrence Livermore study accomplishes is nothing more than a broad approximation based on a single variable, with that single variable being latitude.

However, according to Kevin Peterson, CEO of EcoPreservation, "from our view this is not an either/or proposition when comparing Emission Reductions to Carbon Sequestration, both are vitally important. It is of critical importance that we both reduce our emissions and reduce the amount of additional CO2 that we have added (and will continue to add for the next 20 or 30 years) to the atmosphere."

The earth is reaching, if it hasn't already, a tipping point in which natural systems are so damaged that it cannot replenish and restore itself. It will take action on many fronts -- reduction of carbon emissions from transportation and building, as well as reforestation, cooling urban centers...AS WELL AS replenishing our reduced forests, ocean phytoplankton...and even grass cover in deserts and plains. Every action will help speed the recovery of our natural systems. So...plant a tree, some shrubs, and remove your manicured llawn -- you can make a difference.

PROBLEM:  Climate change is  reducing earth's self-restoration systems

SOLUTION:  Take multiple actions to reduce climate change, air pollution and water shortages by planting and caring for mature trees; as well as reducing travel that causes carbon dioxide and emissions.

Selecting Residential Trees by SIZE

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Making knowledgeable choices about tree species for your home (or garden) is important. Species is THE most important choice you can make both for proper root behavior and water usage... and those factors affect whether the mature tree will cause problems with plumbing or rub your roof raw!

If you know the name of a tree you want to consider and need more information, you can find great detailed information at your local university Extension Centers. But if you don't know tree names, you can use some of the online directories to help you select the right size, shape, color, seasonal cycles...and even the kind of seeds, nuts or fruit possible with your new mini-forest.

Trees are vital to urban livability. Trees provide shade to cool city hardscapes, they provide watershed replenishment by reducing stormwater runoff, and they provide habitat for local wildlife -- and children -- be they wild or not so wild. (Children benefit greatly by having a favorite climbing tree!)

The University of Illinois Extension provides a great directory of trees by SIZE, TOLERANCE, EXPOSURE, USE and PESTS at their website: Selecting Trees for Your Home: BY SIZE

PROBLEM:  Improperly selected tree species is the greatest cause of early demise of mature trees.

SOLUTION:  Select trees for their mature size and shape -- and then maintain them for longterm benefits of shade, water retention, air pollution filtration and higher property value!


forests-csa.jpg

The vote in Feb., 2008 by CalPERS Board of Trustees creates sustainable management standards for its Forestlands Investment policy, part of a new inflation-linked assets class. The new standards require timber managers to use ecologically sustainable logging practices in order to foster long-term and steady growth of both forest and financial returns.

The move by CalPERS, the nation’s largest public pension fund, continues California’s precedent-setting leadership role in fighting global warming and comes at a time when the economic benefits of forests are expanding as the result of growing worldwide demand for protecting the environmental health of the planet.

Forestry experts at The Nature Conservancy point out that by requiring independent, third-party certification for its forest investments, CalPERS will gain access to increasing consumer markets favoring sustainable forest products and green building materials, and keep CalPERS ahead of new regulatory actions.

See California Green Solutions for full story

PROBLEM: Institutional investment supports deforestation when they do not require sustainable forestry management.

SOLUTION: Encourage your investment managers to support carbon sequestration by requiring forests to be maintained for longterm health and carbon reduction.  Make your voice heard!

Trees are the muscles of our  habitat.  They do some pretty heavy work -- they anchor the soil, convert humidity into  moisture for the soil, break rocks into smaller pebbles, and after all that work, they convert their leaves into humus, their limbs and trunks into humble soil.  And they are home and shelter for thousands of different kinds of insects, birds, mammals, worms and microbes. And they store carbon.

“It’s probably a nice thing to do, but planting trees is not a quantitative solution to the real problem. If you plant a tree (CO2 reductions are) only temporary for the life of the tree. If you don’t emit in the first place, then that permanently reduces CO2.” Dr. Philip Duffy of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

And trees aren't permanent!  Surprise! :-)  But some, like the giant sequoias are closer to permanent than many buildings and energy reduction schemes.

But forests as a whole are permanent -- one generation feeding the next.  Carbon is the stuff of life...and trees are the staff of carbon.

PROBLEM: Carbon emissions are creating stress on natural systems that recycle CO2.

SOLUTION: Planting and maintaining trees through MATURITY adds filtration, water retention, shade for hot urban centers, soil replenishment, habitat for wildlife, as well as windbreaks for homes, shade to reduce utility usage, and adds to the livability and value of a building -- whether a home or commercial building.  Trees work hard for us!

Landscaping with Trees for Homes

Trees are the skeleton of the landscape. They are the gentle giants of our habitat. Trees are miniature habitats themselves -- they provide food, shelter, community centers and even water for a wide range of wildlife -- from butterflies, birds and caterpillars to skinks, toads, earthworms...and every four footed wild critter you can think of.

Trees have a secret life that is just as valuable to our habitat as their crowns. Their root systems move water and nutrients from the air to animals to other plants and then to the soil and water table. Their fragile, slow growing roots break up hardpan soil and create aerable soil that will grow more fragile plants.

Can you tell, we love trees! We value their hard work in our environment and in this website we will help you select, nurture and appreciate the trees in your own yard and in your commnity.

Landscaping with Trees for Offices and Business Campuses

Indoor trees and atriums provide wonderful respite during busy days. There's something about green to make us relax! But indoor trees also filter our air and refresh it with new oxygen.

Trees work as hard as we do! We'll help you select and care for your little forest in your workspaces -- whether they be indoor trees or outdoor natural urban forests. And maybe you're luck enough to work in a location that has an extensive parklike campus. We'll help you understand trees and their role in urban heat islands, water conservation and property value so you can tell their story and help your coworkers appreciate these gentle giants of the natural worls.

Tree and Forestry Product Categories

  • Selecting Trees for Your Space and Use
  • Types of Trees by Size and Shape
  • How Trees Save Energy
  • How Trees Preserve Water and the Water Table
  • The Economic Impact of Trees
  • The Beauty and Appreciation of Trees
PROBLEM: Urban forests in the US (not to mention the rain forests) are declining in both numbers and age.

SOLUTION:  Mature trees through add filtration, water retention, shade for hot urban centers, soil replenishment, habitat for wildlife, as well as windbreaks for homes, shade to reduce utility usage, and adds to the livability and value of a building -- whether a home or commercial building.  Trees work hard for us!

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