Tree Huggers

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3 users here now

A community to discuss, appreciate, and advocate for trees and forests. Please follow the SLRPNK instance rules, found here.

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
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At least in the US, I never seem to see a new tree show up.

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Shamelessly stolen from u/OccamsLoppers on Reddit.

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The US's Largest Oak Tree (californiabigtrees.calpoly.edu)
submitted 1 year ago by LibertyLizard to c/treehuggers
 
 

Surprisingly, it belongs to a poorly known species and resides in Southern California--not generally known for its trees.

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Growing trees on buildings is a controversial practice, but if successful, can provide tremendous benefits to dense urban areas where space for planting is otherwise limited.

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Ferns in the forest (pixelfed.social)
submitted 1 year ago by LibertyLizard to c/treehuggers
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A tool for comparing canopy coverage of cities across the world. Tree canopy has major impacts on the livability of cities, particularly as the climate warms. The biggest benefits kick in around 30-40% coverage.

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cross-posted from: https://kbin.social/m/news@lemmy.world/t/237636

UPDATED: Los Angeles City Controller Kenneth Mejia tweeted Friday that StreetsLA would be fining Universal Studios $250 for trimming trees without a city permit. He also said that “outdated l…

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Grandmother Oak, Santa Rosa Island, California (inaturalist-open-data.s3.amazonaws.com)
submitted 1 year ago by LibertyLizard to c/treehuggers
 
 

Beautiful photo of an endangered island oak, Quercus tomentella, courtesy of marivillasol on iNaturalist.

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We've known for a long time that trees can keep the built environment cooler, but with heat waves and deaths spiking worldwide, it has become an urgent need in many areas.

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Defining and measuring these things can be tricky, so there can be debate about the various titleholders. Still, this is a good overview of some of the more famous examples.

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Welcome, Tree Huggers! (upload.wikimedia.org)
submitted 1 year ago by LibertyLizard to c/treehuggers
 
 

Hello everyone,

Like many people, I migrated from Reddit to Lemmy recently following the API fiasco. While I am generally loving the communities on here, one of my favorites, /r/marijuanaenthusiasts hasn't made the jump. So I decided to start a similar community here. While I thought about preserving the name, I always found the constant drip of confused users a little frustrating. Because Lemmy is a new site, and because it allows multiple communities to have the same name, I decided to go with something a little more clear to those not familiar with the history of Reddit.

That said, this community will cover largely the same topics as the subreddit does, including tree appreciation, care, identification, science, news, and really anything else tree or forest related you can think of. Because of my own interests and the instance we're on, I'd like to encourage a bit more of an advocacy and activism theme as well. Not just trees as they are today, but how they can be used as a tool to make the world a better place.

This is my first time starting a community, and I have limited moderating experience, so please be patient with me. If this community takes off, I probably will need to recruit more moderators, but we can cross that bridge when we come to it.

Welcome everyone, and I'm looking forward to seeing what people contribute!

Photo courtesy of Thomas Bresson, under CC BY 4.0.