
Urban Forestry
Alabama’s Urban and Community Forestry (U&CF) Program promotes the development, care, and protection of the estimated one-quarter billion trees in the State, growing where people live, work, and play. These trees help our economy as forest products, by saving energy, increasing property values, and stimulating sales. They protect our environment by cleaning our air and water, stabilizing the soil, and supporting wildlife. They improve our health and enrich our lives by providing shade, blocking UV-B radiation, improving hospital recovery times, and providing many other aesthetic and health benefits. These many benefits are maximized, and the few costs minimized by proper urban forest management.
The U&CF Program encourages management of the urban forest primarily through the following activities:
- Supporting Arbor Day events,
- Providing access to urban forestry and green infrastructure grants,
- Coordinating the Arbor Day Foundation (ADF) Recognition Programs within the State, and

Celebrating Arbor Day!
People have been planting trees for a long, long time. Throughout our world’s history, ordinary citizens have planted trees to restore forests, line avenues, shade homesteads, renew the human spirit, or memorialize the past.
The idea of setting aside a day each year to encourage tree planting would not happen until much later in Nebraska. That’s where the idea was conceived and the name “Arbor Day” first proposed by J. Sterling Morton, then a member of the State Board of Agriculture, and later to become United States Secretary of Agriculture. Morton’s proposal was adopted and over one million trees were planted that first year. The idea quickly spread to other states and even several countries.
In 1887, Alabama Governor Thomas Seay signed the state’s first Arbor Day Proclamation. This tradition of a governor’s proclamation continued through 1975 when the Birmingham Beautification Board, the State Garden Club, the Alabama Forestry Commission, and the State Board of Education collaborated with the State Legislature to pass a legislative act designating the last full week in February as Arbor Week. Today, Arbor Day is observed throughout the state the same time each year.
What can I do?
Every citizen should know that they can do a lot to celebrate Arbor Week in Alabama. Here are some suggestions.
- Get Involved: Contact your local community leaders and see if they have plans to celebrate Arbor Week. If they do, see if you can volunteer your help. If they don’t, offer to help them organize an event.
- Learn About Trees: Trees have many values and benefits for Alabama communities. Go to the library, attend workshops, get information from government sources to better understand how to make your community a better place for people and trees.
- Teach Others: Inspire your friends, family and children to appreciate and respect your community forest. What you pass on to others will last a lifetime. It will also involve more people in tree planting events where you live.
- Plant a Tree: You can make the world a better place by planting a tree.
If you would like more information on Celebrating Arbor Day please contact your local Alabama Forestry Commission office or Dale Dickens at (334) 467-7971
Arbor Day Foundation Recognition Programs
Through a long-term partnership, the Alabama Forestry Commission, the National Association of State Foresters, the USDA Forest Service, and the Arbor Day Foundation (ADF) have supported recognition programs within the State of Alabama. These programs require applicants to meet standards that lead to better-managed urban forests. Current programs include Tree City USA, the oldest of the recognition programs that recognizes municipalities, Tree Campus USA for college and university campuses, and Tree Line USA for utilities.
ADF Programs
- Tree Campus USA
- Tree City USA
- Tree Line USA


Wildland Urban Interface
Management of the wildland urban interface (WUI) continues to increase in importance. Whether it is fires like the California Woolsey and Camp Fires in 2018, invasive species such as the emerald ash borer, or severe weather blowing down trees in a subdivision, the land where people reside within the forest edge requires thoughtful, long-term management. The links and documents at the bottom of this page include a description of the National Fire Protection Association’s Firewise USA program and other aids to make prudent city, community, subdivision, and individual homeowner decisions for safely and productively living in harmony with forest and other wildlands.
Although natural disasters such as wildfires and hurricanes have always had an impact on our forests, many threats to our timberland assets have been created through man’s exploitation. Such was the case in the early 1900s when the practice of “Cut Out-Get Out” clearly indicated that current thinking believed our timber resources were inexhaustible. Thousands of acres of timberland were cutover and wildfire was rampant. And there was no effort to replant trees on the acreage cut or burned.
Fortunately, conservation-minded citizens and government officials saw the fallacy with such thinking and began the first national efforts to protect timberland. A variety of federal and state agencies were created to help meet these challenges, such as the Alabama Forestry Commission and the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. Forest landowners began receiving technical help from professional foresters, and eventually, the forests were reestablished. Those efforts have since provided the citizens of Alabama an enormous opportunity in the form of job creation, clean water and air, and abundant recreational prospects.
However, Alabama’s forests are once again facing the genuine threat from unabated and unplanned growth. The continued demand for growth from the city for more urban development is consuming thousands of acres of forestland annually. A recent study calculated that between 1970 and 1990, urban sprawl consumed almost 40,000 acres of forestland in the Mobile Bay area alone. As our cities and towns grow, the impacts on forest lands are becoming more serious. Ownership of forested tracts is being fragmented into smaller units. Forest vegetation and ecosystems are being broken apart into isolated pieces, often replaced by exotic or invasive species. Forested tracts that once provided valuable functions, such as water quality, air quality, wildlife, scenery, recreation, and timber products, are being lost or replaced by other land uses. Like the challenges that faced our state 100 years ago, this one will require state and local governments, private enterprise, and the general public to work together to meet it head-on. Key questions need to be addressed. What are the risks? What are the costs? And what are the answers?
Solutions to our forest challenges require public awareness and involvement. That’s especially true in the case of urbanization and its impact on Alabama’s forests. Proactive collaboration with an informed electorate is the only way we can address this issue and make sure that our state’s forests remain prosperous and productive for all citizens.
Subdivision Resources
- Benefits of Firewise (PDF)
- Firewise Community Application Form (PDF)
- Firewise Community Renewal Form (PDF)
- Firewise Communities Brochure (PDF)
- Firewise Construction Checklist (PDF)
- Firewise Construction Considerations (PDF)
- How to Become a Firewise Community (PDF)
- How to Create Firewise Communities (PDF)
- National Fire Protection Association – Firewise USA
Homeowner Resources
- 5 Ways to Protect your Forestland from Wildfire (PDF)
- 50 Ways to Make your Woodland Home Firewise (PDF)
- Firewise Homeowners Guide to Protection (PDF)
- Firewise Landscaping (PDF)
- Firewise Landscaping Checklist (PDF)
- Firewise Shrubs Guide (PDF)
- Is your Home Protected from Wildfire? (PDF)
- Living with Fire (PDF)
- Selecting and Maintaining Firewise Plants (PDF)
- Selecting Firewise Shrubs to Reduce Wildfire Risk (PDF)
- Wildfire: Are You Prepared? (PDF)
- Wildfire Risk Assessment Guide for Homeowners (PDF)
Champion Tree Program

Alabama’s Champion Tree Program began in 1970, when 28 trees were listed. Modeled after American Forest’s Big Tree Program, the Alabama Champion Tree Program is designed to discover, recognize, and celebrate the largest of each native tree species in Alabama. The Forestry Commission uses a formula developed by American Forests to determine the points assigned to a tree. The formula is based on three size measurements – circumference, height, and average crown spread. Points are assigned as follows: one point for each inch of circumference, one point for each foot of height, and one point for each four feet of average crown spread. Instructions for using this formula can be found in the “Champion Trees of Alabama” publication below.
Once a champion is declared, its owner and nominator receive certificates as well as a permanent marker to place near the base of the tree. Even if their tree is later superseded by a larger specimen, owners may keep their sign to commemorate their tree’s moment of fame. Anyone can nominate a tree for this program by completing the online nomination form (below). Please be aware that a nominator must have the owner’s permission to nominate and access the tree, and include their contact information on the nomination form.
Before submitting a nomination, we recommend you check the report below to see how big the current champion is, then use our calculator to see how your nominee stacks up.
The Alabama Forestry Commission is charged by state law to protect and sustain our forests. Recognizing special trees through the Champion Tree Program provides an opportunity to celebrate and promote the value of trees, not only for today’s landowners but for future generations of Alabamians as well.
You can enjoy seeing the sizes of Alabama’s largest trees in the report found below, and if you have a larger tree on your own property, feel free to nominate it here on our website.
How does your tree measure up?
This online calculator will give you a rough estimate of whether your tree is big enough to become the next champion tree. Please compare this to The Champion Trees of Alabama listed above.
Circumference: inches around the stem measured 4.5 feet above the ground
Height: estimate distance in feet from tallest point on the tree to the ground
Spread: average measurement in feet from one side of the drip line to another
For more information about Alabama Champion Trees, please contact:
Katie Wiswall
Phone: (334) 399-4590 Email: Katie.Wsiwall@forestry.alabama.gov
OR
Dale Dickens
Phone: (334) 467-7971 Email: Dale.Dickens@forestry.alabama.gov
Mail: Champion Trees of Alabama
Alabama Forestry Commission
PO Box 302550
Montgomery, Alabama 36130-2550
