New Tools Available To Help With Trees In Buffers, Communities
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Two new websites are now available to help those working to plant and protect trees throughout the Chesapeake Bay watershed. Pennsylvania is connected to these efforts through its Forest Buffer and TreeVitalize efforts. The Chesapeake Riparian Forest Buffer Network and Chesapeake Tree Canopy Network-- both launched through partnerships between the Chesapeake Bay Program’s Forestry Workgroup, the Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service-- were created to help communities meet their forest buffer and tree canopy goals. Forest buffers are considered one of the most cost-effective practices for reducing pollution because of their ability to efficiently trap and filter pollutants carried by runoff. Trees in urban and suburban communities provide an array of benefits, including: cleaning the air; reducing polluted runoff; providing shade; and enhancing quality of life. For more information, visit the Chesapeake Riparian Forest Buffer Network and Chesapeake Tree Canopy Network websites. NewsClips: Crable: 177 Ash Trees Fall Victim To Emerald Ash Borer In Lancaster How To Get A Free Tree In Philly For Your Yard This Spring Lots Of Critters Springing Up In Vernal Pools Luzerne Farmers Preparing For State Conservation Inspections Already Polluted, Susquehanna River Cleanup Could Cease Under Trump Budget Trump Wants To End Chesapeake Bay Funding, Here’s Who’s Fighting Back Trump Budget Cuts Funding For EPA’s Chesapeake Bay Program Republican Congressman Scott Perry: God Is A Polluter Latest From The Chesapeake Bay Journal Click Here to subscribe to the Chesapeake Bay Journal Follow Chesapeake Bay Journal On Twitter Like Chesapeake Bay Journal On Facebook (Reprinted from the March 22 DCNR Resource newsletter. Click Here to sign up for your own copy.) [Posted: March 23, 2017] |
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3/27/2017 |
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