- Written by madhu
- Hits: 1704
Environmental Benefits of Planting Trees
Environmental Benefits Of Planting Trees
1. Trees serve as a natural habitat, which provides support to a wide variety of flora and fauna. They provide a sense of privacy and security to the wildlife, seeking shelter in the woods, apart from providing them with food and nutrients.
2. Trees remove excess amount of carbon dioxide and air pollutants present in the atmosphere, including sulfur dioxide, ozone and nitrogen oxide. In addition, they give us oxygen required for supporting life.
3. Planting trees is very important to improve the quality of air and reduce its pollution.
4. The visual quality of a landscape is improved by planting trees, which, in turn, improves the quality of life.
5. Planting trees help reduce ozone levels in urban cities. Even the biodiversity gets enriched in turn.
6. Trees control the climate by moderating the effects of sun, wind, and rain. While they moderate summer temperature by providing shade, in winters, they act as windbreaks for your home, thereby helping you save on heating cost.
7. Trees reduce soil erosion, because they bind the soil through their roots, which would otherwise have been washed away in rainstorms and flood. Trees also help improve the fertility of soil. Rich soil transfers nutrients to food, which contributes to human health.
8. The greenery of trees adds color to the landscape and enhances the picturesque beauty of the environment.
9. According to a recent study, houses and properties on tree-lined streets are found to be attractive places to live in. Apart from this, trees and shrubs planted around homes also provide evaporative cooling benefits.
10. Trees are great absorbers of noise. Noise pollution can be reduced, to a great extent, by planting more and more trees.
11. Planting of trees facilitates better management of flood water. Trees also moderate flood hazards, by allowing the rainwater to percolate into the soil, instead of running over it.
12. The demand for clean drinking water can be met by planting new trees. Forests and plant cover naturally slows the runoff of rainwater, thereby filtering it. Once slowed, rainwater seeps down to refill underground storage tanks or aquifers. Also, they prevent water from mixing with the salt water of oceans. This is of immense help, as salty water takes much longer to re-enter the fresh water portion of the hydrological cycle.