Via Medium, an article on the potential for urban forests and vegetation to intercept and filter stormwater runoff, absorb airborne pollutants, provide windbreaks to protect buildings from wind damage, regulate urban heat island effects through shading and evaporation, provide wildlife habitats and ecosystem services, and mitigate climate change by storing carbon dioxide:
Urban forest programmes establish trees in public spaces such as parks, along streets or alleys, or in any available open areas that local government manages, for example, along a stream right-of-way, around public buildings, or in city-owned vacant lots. Urban forests can extend to green belts around cities that buffer waterways and regulate development. Urban forests can even extend to the acquisition and management of lands to preserve urban watersheds so that drinking water supply and quality are protected.
Melbourne’s Citizen Foresters
The City of Melbourne’s Urban Forest Strategy is aiming to increase canopy cover from 22 per cent to 40 per cent by 2040. To achieve this target, the city is seeking citizen volunteers to help create resilient, healthy and diverse urban landscapes for the future. Citizen Foresters are trained and empowered to grow the urban forest and improve urban ecology by carrying out essential advocacy, monitoring and research tasks. The programme holds events that allow participants to meet new people, learn new skills, and build knowledge about green space in the city. The programme has a variety of activities that allow residents to participate in meaningful, fun and rewarding environmental work.
The take-out
Citizen engagement is a key tool in enhancing urban forest cover.