United States: Initiatives · Overview · Forests · Publications & Maps · News

 

United States in Brief

Total Area: 9,158,950 km²; 7,935,157 km² (lower 48 states)

Neighboring countries: Canada, Mexico

Capital city: Washington, D.C.

Other urban centers: 48 cities with a population above 1 million 

Total population (2000): 281,421,906

Average annual population growth (2000): 1.2%

GNP per capita (2000): $34,260

Forest cover (2000): 2,259,930 km²

Percentage of land area forested: 24.7%

Number of protected areas (IUCN I-V categories): 3,063

Number of national parks: 205

Percentage of national parks as a total of land area: 2.7%

Biodiversity¹

Mammals: 432 species

Number of endemic species: 105

Est. number of species/10,000 km²: 45

Birds: 650 species

Number of endemic species: 67

Est. number of species/10,000 km²: 68

Reptiles: 287 species

Number of endemic species: 79

Est. number of species/10,000 km²: 30

Amphibians: 263 species

Number of endemic species: 152

Est. number of species/10,000 km²: 28

Plants: 19,473 species

Number of endemic species: 4,036

Est. number of species/10,000 km²: 2,036


¹ Includes 50 states and Washington, D.C.

Sources

Forest Resources Assessment 2000.  UN FAO.

Environmental Systems Research Institute

U.S. Census Bureau

World Development Indicators Database

World Conservation Monitoring Center as cited in Earth Trends

World Resources Institute, World Resources 2000-2001:  People and Ecosystems

 


United States: Overview

The United States of America is the world's third-largest country in size. The mainland territory borders the North Atlantic Ocean and the Pacific Ocean and extends from below the Tropic of Cancer to above the Arctic Circle.  This vast land is a land of contrasts that houses a wide array of ecological conditions, ranging from striving forests in the Appalachians, prairies of the Midwest, the desert of Death Valley, temperate rainforests along the interior of the West Coast, Alaska’s tundra, to the subtropical rainforests of Hawaii.  Such variety results in an extraordinary richness of plants, animals and ecosystems.

This richness, faces real and urgent threats.  The forests of the United States have undergone throughout extensive conversion to agriculture lands and urban developments.  Although forest cover is stable now, the remaining forests are still undergoing significant human disturbance.  They are being degraded and fragmented, and they no longer possess the same ecological integrity that the original forests contained.

While this happens, there is growing debate concerning the management of these remaining forests.  Some argue that what remains should be closed off to preserve their biological diversity, recreational and wilderness values, while others advocate for the development and use of the natural resources these forests contain.  Thus, information on where the remaining forests in the United States are, and what their condition is, is key to implementing appropriate management measures.

Global Forest Watch has partnered with the Conservation Biology Institute to gather, distribute information and maps about the forests in the United States.  In April 2002, Global Forest Watch published its first US report: Low-Access Forests and Their Level of Protection in North America which looks at the remaining large tracts of relatively undisturbed forests and their level of protection at a continental scale.

Work is underway building on this first coarse scale assessment.  Global Forest Watch is “zooming in” to look at forests in New England and Alaska at a more detailed scale.  Global Forest Watch is also sponsoring work by the Conservation Biology Institute to assess forest fragmentation at the national level.

Our products, and especially this website, aim at increasing the transparency of information available on forests.  Using our Data Warehouse you can download and manipulate for your own analyses the geographical data (GIS layers) we possess.  You can also send us your comments.

Sources

Dirk Bryant, Daniel Nielsen and Laura Tangley, The Last Frontier Forests: Ecosystems and Economies on the Edge (World Resources Institute, Washington DC, 1997).

Stein, B.A. “A Fragile Cornucopia. Assessing the Status of US Biodiversity.” Environment 43 no. 7. 12-22. 2001.

Stein, B.A., L.S. Kutner, and J.S. Adams (Eds.) Precious Heritage: The Status of Biodiversity in the United States (Oxford University Press, 2001).

World Resources Institute, World Resources 200-2001: People and Ecosystems: The Fraying Web of Life (World Resources Institute, Washington DC, 2000).

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