The Next 100 Years of Forests in the U.S. – Growing the Forests We Want and Need
Posted: April 24, 2013So, what does the future hold for America’s Forests? Are our best days behind us? While the challenges may be many, there is reason for hope – namely, our history as a nation that values forests and has proven its ability to restore and protect them. Today, the U.S. has more trees than 100 years ago, and almost exactly the same extent of forest cover as in the early 1900s. This forest retention has been accomplished despite intense pressure from a quadrupling of our population; substantial use of wood in construction and for other uses; massive urban and suburban expansion; devastation from insects such as spruce budworm and pine bark beetle; and diseases such as Dutch elm, chestnut blight, and white pine blister rust. So how did we do it, and, more importantly, can we do it again?