Skip to main content
Menu
Get Involved
Give
Contact
Ask Extension
About
Leadership
UMD Extension Impact
Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Respect
Careers
Directory
Program and Organizational Development
Statewide Extension Advisory Council
Resources
Animal Agriculture
Plant Agriculture
Yard & Garden
Pests
Natural Resources
Environment & Energy
Agribusiness Management
Food & Nutrition
Health & Well-Being
4-H & Youth Education
Programs
4-H Youth Development
Family & Consumer Sciences
Agriculture & Food Systems
Environment & Natural Resources
Home & Garden Information Center
Locations
Publications
News & Events
All News
Events
Forest Health
Home
Resources
Forest Health
For full functionality of this site it is necessary to enable JavaScript. Here are
instructions for how to enable JavaScript in your web browser
.
Sort by:
Date
Title
Updated: May 24, 2023
Woodland Management: "The Woods in Your Backyard"
The land care practices in "The Woods in Your Backyard" has helped hundreds of property owners and land managers. Our new publications, "Woodland Health Practices Handbook" and "Woodland Health Assessment Checklist," help green industry professionals apply these practices to their business services.
Updated: May 18, 2023
Maryland Beech Trees Under Attack by Novel Microbe
A non-native nematode is causing beech leaf disease in native Maryland beech trees. This article offers advice on identifying BLD in local beech trees and what to do if you find evidence.
Updated: May 16, 2023
Changes and More Changes
There have been a few changes since the last issue of Branching Out.
Updated: May 16, 2023
Invasives in Your Woodland: Chinese and Japanese Wisteria
Chinese and Japanese Wisterias arrived in the U.S. in the early 1800s and have since spread to habitats across much of the eastern states. These twining and climbing vines can not only strangle and shade out trees, but can form dense thickets that suppress other native species.
Updated: May 16, 2023
Branching Out Spring 2023 News and Notes
The News and Notes roundup for this issue notes that invasive plant species are affecting other countries as well as the U.S., notes that a vital program led by University of Maryland researchers will return to operation in space, shares information about watersheds and drinking water, and wonders if a new app will revolutionize forestry mapping.
Updated: May 16, 2023
Planting trees helps our forests weather climate change
Spring is here, and there is no better time to get outside and plant new trees on your property or in your community. And opportunities to do so abound this time of year. The Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay and many other environmental groups are hosting tree-planting events throughout the region to improve water quality, create wildlife habitat, clean the air and enhance climate resiliency for the watershed.
Updated: May 4, 2023
Forest Threats: Invasive Plants and Shrubs
Resources for information about common invasive trees and shrubs in Maryland and the mid-Atlantic region.
Updated: May 1, 2023
Fighting Bugs with Bugs
Eastern hemlock is a coniferous tree that favors the cool and humid climate along the Appalachian Mountains. Hemlocks can grow more than 150 feet tall and live for more than 800 years. Their short, dense needles provide excellent habitat for many kinds of wildlife, from warblers to bobcats. Unfortunately, healthy hemlocks are becoming increasingly rare due to the invasive insect called hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA). New efforts by the Virginia Dept. of Forestry are combatting this invasive bug with another bug.
Updated: April 28, 2023
Forest Threats: Insects
Resources for information about common invasive insects in Maryland and the mid-Atlantic region.
Updated: April 11, 2023
Invasives in Your Woodland: Princess Tree
The Princess Tree was imported from China in the 1800s and has become an aggressive, invasive plant in much of the mid-Atlantic and mid-South states.
First
Previous
…
Page
3
Page
4
Page
5
Page
6
Current page
7
Page
8
Page
9
Page
10
Page
11
…
Next
Last