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Guidance: How to protect and manage the urban forest

Forestry Commission

December 1
09:00 2023

What is the urban forest?

Go to the top of the tallest building in any town or city and the urban forest is all the trees you can see from the top and some you cant. Urban trees are everywhere in our towns and cities; they grow on streets, next to railways and canals, in parks, in peoples gardens and in urban woodlands. Looking after the urban forest is the practice of managing all trees and woodlands in urban areas for the multiple benefits they provide to society.

The Forestry Commission co-ordinates the Urban Forest and Woodland Advisory Committee Network (UFWACN). This network of people who work mostly with trees in urban areas provides expert advice to the Forestry Commission on its urban forestry work. Read more about the Urban Forestry and Woodlands Advisory Committee (FWAC) vision for urban forestry (PDF, 2.9 MB, 26 pages).

Benefits of the urban forest

The urban forest provides many different benefits to our urban areas. Some of the most important ones are:

  • improving the quality of the air by removing dust, polluting gases and other substances that are harmful to people
  • making people feel better when they spend time in places with trees
  • making different locations like parks, woodlands, squares and shopping areas enjoyable places to visit and in which to spend time
  • creating shade to cool down buildings and open spaces
  • cooling places down by releasing water vapour into the air
  • providing places within trees trunks, branches and leaves for animals and other plants to live
  • providing a source of food for animals and people too

People and the urban forest

The urban forest provides opportunities to engage local communities and also provides a unique green space that benefits peoples mental and physical health.

You can find out more about the benefits to mental and physical health in these blog posts:

Urban forest managers often find it a positive experience to engage the local community in working out the objectives for a piece of woodland to maximise the benefits that the woodland can deliver to the community.

Trees are also a key element of the Governments Green Infrastructure Framework for England and you can find out on unlocking the multiple benefits of trees for people in our towns and cities in this: Introduction to the Green Infrastructure Framework.

Climate change resilience and the urban forest

Climate Change is going to bring significant challenges for people who live in urban areas, and we will all have to make changes to how we live and work. Planting and caring for urban trees will help us in this task. To do this, we need to grow trees in urban areas that are suitable not just for climate conditions now but also for how we expect them to be 40 to 50 years from now.

The best way to do this is to make sure we have many different types of trees within the urban forest. This is called species diversity and it is one of the ways we can protect the urban forest as a whole so it can continue to provide multiple benefits to our urban areas.

Guidance on species diversity and managing urban trees for climate change resilience can be found below:

Looking after the urban forest

Managing the urban forest is not only about tree species selection and planting. Looking after trees throughout their entire lives takes a range of skills and expertise and the collaboration of groups of professions all working to the same goal; better, more healthy trees in our towns and cities.

It is important that landowners take a long-term view of caring for their trees and are prepared to provide enough resources to do this properly.

The following links can provide more information on good practice in managing urban trees:

Managing risks including tree health in the urban forest

Successful management of the urban forest requires particular attention to tree health as often a tree health problem can indicate a risk for people too. Urban areas are often seen as presenting a more substantial disease threat mainly because of more dense populations of both trees and people. Urban areas are also a potential source for the introduction of new pests and diseases because of the intensity of activity and high volumes of travel, trade and their interaction.

Find out more about tree pests and diseases and make sure your biosecurity measures are appropriate.

If you are concerned that a tree you own or one in your urban environment has a pest or disease please report it using the Forestry Commissions Tree Alert.

Successful management of the urban forest also involves ensuring that trees do not present a physical threat to the safety of people and infrastructure. Here are some useful documents that can provide more information:

Data on the urban forest

We can measure the size of the Urban Forest in a particular area by assessing its tree canopy cover. Forest Research (part of the Forestry Commission) has undertaken tree canopy cover measurements across the UK down to very local levels. You can look at these measurements and also add some of the trees in your area too.

You can find out more at these websites:

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