The Roanoke Park Conservancy received a major grant from the Missouri Department of Conservation to conduct a Tree Inventory in Roanoke Park! The MDC's T.R.I.M. (Tree Resource Improvement and Maintenance) grant program provided partial funding for the tree inventory with Roanoke Park volunteers and donors kicking in the balance.
This area of the website will be devoted to news and results of the Tree Inventory. For more background information, see the article: Tree Inventory Grant WON!
Thanks to your generous donations, the Tree Inventory has been fully funded as of March 26, 2013.
$ 8,932 – Cost Share Reimbursal from MDC
+ $ 1,300 – Value of Donated Labor
+ $ 1,678 – Total of Your Generous Contributions (tax deductible for you)
= $11,910 – Total Project Cost
A grand total of 2,100 trees in Roanoke Park were identified, assessed and mapped! The online master map is still being finalized and trees are being chosen for the "Interactive Tree Walk." Thanks to the Missouri Department of Conservation for awarding the T.R.I.M. grant to the Roanoke Park Conservancy.
Please explore the main ONLINE ROANOKE PARK TREE INVENTORY MAP. Click the image at right to better understand the map interface, then click the link above.
As a snapshot of our little slice of nature, the table below shows how many of each kind of tree in the inventory. You can also look at expanded data by downloading an excel spreadsheet: RoanokeTrees.xlsx.
Category | |
Species | Count |
Dominant Species | |
Hackberry | 691 |
Common Species | |
American Elm | 128 |
Eastern Redbud | 115 |
American Basswood | 110 |
Eastern Hophornbeam | 101 |
Invasive Species (Non-Native) | |
Tree of Heaven | 165 |
Norway Maple | 36 |
Buckthorn | 14 |
Honeysuckle | 1 |
Oak & Hickory Trees | |
Chinkapin oak | 88 |
Hickory | 50 |
Red Oak | 32 |
Bur Oak | 16 |
White Oak | 10 |
Oak | 10 |
Shagbark Hickory | 10 |
Pin Oak | 4 |
Swamp White Oak | 2 |
Shingle Oak | 1 |
Maple Trees | |
Boxelder | 22 |
Red Maple | 2 |
Sugar Maple | 2 |
Silver Maple | 1 |
Maple | 1 |
Category | |
Species | Count |
Ash Trees | |
Green Ash | 71 |
White Ash | 9 |
Black Ash | 1 |
Other Kansas City Native | |
Red Mulberry | 79 |
Black Walnut | 64 |
Black Cherry | 32 |
American Sycamore | 32 |
Honeylocust * | 28 |
Eastern Cottonwood | 16 |
Kentucky Coffeetree | 5 |
Juniper | 4 |
Red Mulberry | 1 |
Other Missouri Native | |
Hawthorn * | 18 |
Black Locust * | 7 |
Northern Catalpa | 5 |
Eastern White Pine | 4 |
Non-Native Trees | |
Siberian Elm | 41 |
Mulberry * | 23 |
Scotch Pine | 19 |
Austrian Pine | 13 |
White mulberry * | 7 |
Broadleaf Deciduous Small * | 5 |
Broadleaf Deciduous Medium * | 2 |
Littleleaf Linden | 2 |
Total Inventoried Trees | 2,100 |
All categories above are native except as noted.
Hawthorn: The ones in front of the community center are nursery cultivars. Others are wild type. Exact species and/or cultivar unknown.
Black Locust: Originally native to southern Missouri, black locust has spread across the country. It is not considered a favored species for the Kansas City area by the Missouri Department of Conservation since it can become invasive to prairie and glade habitats.
Mulberry: Red Mulberry is Native, White Mulberry is from Asia. "Mulberry" (identified generically) may be red/white hybrids.
Honeylocust: Some of the park's honeylocust are wild type, with thorns. Some are thornless cultivar street trees, planted by the city.
Broadleaf Deciduous Small/Medium: These are generic tree inventory designations. Native status not specified.
These results and the tree inventory GIS data have been shared with local biologists and foresters with the Missouri Department of Conservation and the KCMO Parks Department. Many comments were generated about the results, how our forest came to be as it is, how to manage it in the future, and varying opinions about the value of certain species:
The Park! The Trail! The Trees!
Chris DeLong and Brett Shoffner took us on a virtual stroll through Roanoke Park with discussions of the recent Tree Inventory, the new Trails and future efforts toward a better Roanoke Park and a better Kansas City. If you didn't make it you missed a good one. (March 26, 2013.)
Roanoke Park Tree Inventory Presentation on Scribd.com
Chris DeLong detailed the results of the Tree Inventory, showed how to play around with the online map: The Roanoke Park Tree Inventory on arcgis.com, giving one example of changing the symbols on the same underlying data to produce an Invasive Trees Heat Map. Chris highlighted the critical importance Native Trees have to our local ecosystem, with inspiration from Doug Tallamy's Bringing Nature Home.) Several attendees were inspired to plant some natives on their own properties and all wholeheartedly supported that direction for Roanoke Park.
Brett Shoffner showed evidence that Roanoke Park was serving as a model for ecological restoration and showed how trailbuilding was working to bring people together and get people out into underutilized parks. The neighbors of Rosedale Park and Kessler Park are following our lead! The sense of pride and protective "ownership" people felt for Roanoke Park was palpable in the room.
Over $2,000 was raised for the park with a big chunk of that coming from several generous park neighbors who offered up a challenge match to the event's attendees. Challenge taken and met! Thanks to these and other donations we can report that the Tree Inventory is completely paid off (woohoo!) and the Roanoke Park Conservancy will be directing funds toward the park in a variety of other ways including planting TREES.
Part of the work of the Roanoke Park Tree Inventory included entering the data into the U.S. Forest Service's i-Tree Streets program. This program generates data on the trees to quantify their value in a wide range of metrics.
Have you ever seen signs on trees in Kansas City that said "This tree pays us back X dollars"? Those figures are generated by i-Tree Streets and represented the value a tree can give us over its lifetime by reducing heating/cooling costs, soaking up stormwater, improving air quality and sequestering carbon. It adds up. Here's a Heartland Tree Alliance page about it: http://bridgingthegap.org/heartland-tree-alliance/treetags/
Roanoke Park's trees pay us back $153,061 every year!
(Even more since not every tree in the park was included in the inventory.)
See below for the full reports from i-Tree Streets using the data from the Roanoke Park Tree Inventory.
Roanoke Park i-Tree Annual Benefits Reports (884kb pdf)
The above pdf contains reports on the Annual Benefits of the inventoried trees in the areas of Energy, Stormwater, Air Quality, CO2 reduction/storage, Aesthetic (property values) and a Summary.
Roanoke Park i-Tree Structural Analysis Reports (1070kb pdf)
The above pdf contains reports on the species composition and quality of the inventoried trees. Reports on Population Summary, Complete Population, Species Distribution, Relative Age Distribution, Importance Values, Condition and Relative Performance Index reports are all included. Explanatory notes appear where necessary.
Read the story:
http://www.kctv5.com/story/19762783/grassroots-effort-to-improve-roanoke-park (Unfortunately the video is no longer online.)
The inventory will cover a little over half the park and be a representative sample of our "urban forest." (2,000 trees.) We'll see the mix of trees in the park and know what species need to be planted in the future to bring more diversity, beauty, longevity and better wildlife habitat to our woods. See the Tree Inventory Grant Won!! article to learn more and consider donating to our share of the matching grant at the Donate to the Park page. Thanks to the Missouri Department of Conservation for awarding the T.R.I.M. grant to the Roanoke Park Conservancy.
The Conservancy's grant application was for a Tree Inventory. This will pay for a GIS mapmaker and certified arborist, working as a team, to go through the park and identify and assess every tree over 3" trunk diameter. The GIS map maker is Midwest GeoInfo. Click the link to see some of their work. The arborist is Ivan Katzer.
Now we need YOUR HELP to complete this matching grant, so please visit our Donate to the Park page to help us come up with the funds we need for our portion.
$ 8,932 – Cost Share Reimbursal from MDC
+ $ 1,300 – Value of Donated Labor
+ $ 1,678 – Total of Your Generous Contributions (tax deductible for you)
= $11,910 – Total Project Cost
Trail Maps, in various formats:
Roanoke_Park_Trails.pdf (417 kb).
Roanoke Park Trees and Trails Google Map
"Roanoke Park Tour" on MTBProject.com
To avoid damaging trails, check Trail Status before biking or hiking off road. ("Rozarks" = Roanoke Park's 2.5 miles plus Rosedale's 3.5 miles.)
Contact the Westport-Roanoke Community Center to find out about their facilities or inquire about reserving spaces.