Whose woods are these? Forest patch characteristics and ownership across cities of the eastern United States

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Citation of Original Publication

Sonti, Nancy F., Matthew E. Baker, Michael Allman, et al. “Whose Woods Are These? Forest Patch Characteristics and Ownership across Cities of the Eastern United States.” Landscape and Urban Planning 260 (August 2025): 105374. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.landurbplan.2025.105374.

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This work was written as part of one of the author's official duties as an Employee of the United States Government and is therefore a work of the United States Government. In accordance with 17 U.S.C. 105, no copyright protection is available for such works under U.S. Law.
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Abstract

Forests in cities are important social and ecological resources that vary in spatial extent, configuration, and ownership across urban areas, yet these patterns are not well described. Using high resolution urban tree canopy maps and planimetric data from three major cities of the eastern United States (New York, NY; Philadelphia, PA; Baltimore, MD), we distinguish patches of forest from other tree canopy types. We then compare forest patch spatial characteristics and ownership across the three cities. Baltimore has the greatest citywide forest patch cover (8.3 %) and forest patch area per resident (29.5 m²/person), followed by Philadelphia (6.3 % and 13.7 m²/person) and New York City (3.9 % and 3.5 m²/person). Baltimore’s forest also has the largest median patch sizes, and the lowest citywide forest edge to core ratio. Thus, we find Baltimore’s forest cover to be more concentrated and less fragmented than the other two cities. While all cities have a majority of forest patch area located on municipal property, Baltimore has the greatest amount of privately owned forest, followed by Philadelphia and then NYC. Baltimore also has the largest number of property parcels and owner types per patch compared to the other two cities. These patterns in distribution of forest cover reflect historical and present-day processes of local ecology and economic development, and have implications for effective conservation and management of forests in cities.