Hug a Tree

Local governments and organizations are paying attention to trees.
Why? Because trees have benefits:
- Trees help clean the air we breathe — they absorb heat-trapping carbon from the atmosphere.
- Tree roots filter pollutants from water. Trees also slow water absorption into the soil, reducing risk of flooding and landslides.
- Trees provide habitat to over 80% of the world's species of insects, fungi, moss, mammals, birds, and plants.
- Forests provide jobs to over 1.6 billion people. Sustainable logging provides building materials. Food-producing trees provide fruit, nuts, berries, and leaves.
- Shade from trees helps cool our environment and protect our skin.
- Trees help cool the planet by sucking in and storing harmful greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide into their trunks, branches, and leaves — and releasing oxygen back into the atmosphere.
Because trees are so important, there are several public and private initiatives that aim to increase the number of trees on the Eastern Shore. Some examples:
- Maryland Forest Service sponsors programs under its Tree-mendous Maryland initiative, including programs for rural landowners.
- The Chesapeake Bay Trust awards grants for tree planting projects across the Eastern Shore.
- ShoreRivers’ Tree Steward program organizes volunteers to plant and care for trees on the Eastern Shore.
- Wicomico County has a forest preservation program.
- Betterton has a community forest master plan.
- Many communities have tree conservation and development into their Comprehensive Plans.
How much tree cover is there on the Eastern Shore?
The Chesapeake Bay Program and partners sponsor the Chesapeake Tree Canopy Network, a database of land use and tree canopy information, by county, for the Chesapeake Bay watershed. Each county has its own fact sheet, with information on the extent of current (2017-18) tree cover and land use, types and changes in coverage, and specific benefit values in terms of pollution removal, reduced stormwater runoff, and carbon sequestration.
As the Chesapeake Tree Canopy Network says, “The first step towards a tree canopy goal is understanding what you have.”
There has been some loss of tree cover on developed lands in recent history, as shown in the table below.

Here’s how the Eastern Shore counties look now.









Jan Plotczyk spent 25 years as a survey and education statistician with the federal government, at the Census Bureau and the National Center for Education Statistics. She retired to Rock Hall.
Common Sense for the Eastern Shore




