Forests of the United States


It has been estimated that before European settlement, forests in the United States mainland covered nearly. Since the mid-1600s, about of forest have been cleared, primarily for agriculture during the 19th century.
As of 2023, approximately 36% of the US is forested. Excluding the U.S. territories, forested land in the U.S. covers roughly 811,581,000 acres. As of 2005, the United States ranked seventh in the rate of loss of its old growth forests.

Current coverage

While total forest area has been relatively stable for the last 100 years, there have been significant regional shifts in the area and composition of the nation's forests. Reversion of marginal farmland in the east, large scale planting in the South, and fire suppression have contributed to increases in forest area. Urbanization, conversion to agriculture, reservoir construction, and natural disasters have been major factors contributing to loss of forests.
Eastern forests cover about and are predominantly broadleaf, with the exception of extensive coniferous forests and plantations in the southern coastal region. These are largely in private ownership. By contrast, about of western forests are predominantly coniferous and in public ownership. Nearly ten million private individuals own about of forest and other wooded land. Most public forest land is held by four Federal agencies as well as numerous state, county, and municipal government organizations.
Major uses of forests include timber production, recreation, hunting, fishing, watershed and fisheries protection, wildlife habitat and biodiversity protection, and gathering nontimber products such as berries, mushrooms, and medicinal plants.
There are boreal forests in Alaska. Forests in Hawaii and the U.S. territories are tropical.
The most heavily forested regions of the U.S. are Maine, New Hampshire, American Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands and West Virginia; the least heavily forested regions are North Dakota, Nebraska, and South Dakota.
The U.S. had a 2018 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 6.65/10, ranking it 67th globally out of 172 countries.

Environmental issues

Invasive species

Invasive species are a significant threat to forests in the United States, harming native ecosystems, reducing biodiversity, and causing tree mortality across millions of acres. Many non-native insects, pathogens, and plants have become established in U.S. forests in the absence of natural predators or host resistance, allowing them to spread rapidly and damage native species. Insects such as the emerald ash borer have caused widespread mortality in ash, hemlock, and hardwood forests, while pathogens like sudden oak death and white pine blister rust have further disrupted forest health.
Projects have been undertaken to remove invasive species from forests in the U.S.; for example, in the U.S. Minor Outlying Islands, rats were successfully eradicated in the tropical forest on Palmyra Atoll.

Wildfire

The five federal regulatory agencies managing forest fire response and planning for 676 million acres in the United States are the Bureau of Land Management, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the National Park Service, the United States Forest Service and the United States Fish and Wildlife Service. Several hundred million U.S. acres of wildfire management are also conducted by state, county, and local fire management organizations. In 2014, legislators proposed The Wildfire Disaster Funding Act to provide $2.7 billion fund appropriated by congress for the USDA and Department of Interior to use in fire suppression. The bill is a reaction to United States Forest Service and Department of Interior costs of Western Wildfire suppression appending that amounted to $3.5 billion in 2013.

Economy

As at 2022 the United States was the largest producer of coniferous industrial roundwood, with a production of 306 million m3.