“A tree is described as self-standing unit. Multiple trunks sharing the same root system must count as one.”
colorado aspen
Start here:
http://fia.fs.fed.us/slides/major-trends.ppt
http://forestry.about.com/od/foresthistory1/a/tree_plt_timeln.htm
Oh! ...it's your son's project. :)
If you count trees larger than 3/4 inch, the limit I can cut with my garden snippers, there are 100 per acre in the quarter of Alaska that has trees. That is 8 billion trees in Alaska.
Ummmm...... lots and LOTS of trees in the mountains of New Mexico. You could be a million light right there, maybe more.
This seems like the kind of question with many variables. Was the teacher refering to trees used to harvest lumber, like the many fir trees of Washington? Or is the number intended to include the Orange trees of Flordia, the Apple Trees of Washington, and every other variety of food producing tree?
Tundra is half, taiga half the other half, and forest the remainder. BTW, the tundra is on fire, 350 square miles burnt and still burning.
More trees now than when the Pilgrims landed.
When you get the total, add one more (you forgot to count Al Gore).
There are more acres of trees in New England today than there were when the pilgrims landed. It’s hard to believe but we are at a peak of a 350 year forestation cycle that was at its ebb in about 1640 or so.
If you can get within 10-fold either way, I’d say that’s a pretty good guess.
My guess would be somewhere 10 - 100 billion.
I drive the I5 corridor a lot, and believe me, there’s a humungous amount of trees out there.
Trees, in thousands
Outside Alaska: 286,434,232
Can’t make sense of the Alaska data because it seems low...
source:
Here's a pretty good forest/tree distribution map from 1859 for comparisons.
You have quite a job there ... GOOD LUCK! And let us know the answer!!! ;-D
Hey Sam’have you ever been to the Pine Barrens of south Jersey? One could get lost out there!
Dont forget the 3 in my yard.
Not to disappoint you but the U.S. Forest Service doesn’t even know how many trees they have in any given National Forest. I’ve tried unsuccesfully to get this information when preparing environmental assessments in the past. Either they don’t have a clue, or they are like the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service when it comes to endangered species, they will not tell. It’s my guess that neither agency has a clue as to the resources they are in charge of managing or protecting.
I think you need to take a geography course..
Heck, I've planted about twenty trees on my property just this year. I don't even know how many trees I have.