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forest gardening for a sustainable future
Curated by Bronwen Evans
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Rescooped by Bronwen Evans from Natural Soil Nutrients onto forest gardening
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I’m Ready-Are You?

I’m Ready-Are You? | forest gardening | Scoop.it

A story about trying to build a home for butterflies. Our place www.faasai.com is full of them http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10150177092915810.301296.96592850809&type=1

But reading this blog - I realise it is not so easy!

 

"For the past year  I have been wildlife gardening in earnest. Everything I did was to help build a habitat for critters, especially for butterflies. Not just for them to visit, but for them to build a home. And the habitat has also become home now to birds, insects, frogs, snakes, toads and so many others...but"


Via ManureTea Since 1924
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The High Cost of Losing Urban Trees

The High Cost of Losing Urban Trees | forest gardening | Scoop.it
Tennessee reaps a $638 million yearly benefit from its urban trees – and an $80 billion loss if they disappeared.

Through energy savings, air and water filtering and carbon storage, the urban trees of Tennessee account for more than $638 million in benefits, according to a report [PDF] conducted by the Forest Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture and released earlier this year.

The biggest savings are attributed to carbon storage, which the authors of the report value at an estimated $350 million. Collectively, the state's urban trees store about 16.9 million tons, with each ton stored worth about $20.70 to the state every year. Air and water filtration is also one of the functional benefits of urban trees, and the report estimates the value of this work at $204 million per year. The trees are credited with removing 27,100 tons of pollutants each year, including ozone, particulate matter, and sulfur dioxide. And because of the shading they provide, these urban trees are credited with saving about $66 million in energy costs annually.


Via Lauren Moss, paradoxcity
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