MARYLAND AT A GLANCE

FORESTS


[photo, White pines, Gunpowder Falls State Park, south of Bradshaw, Baltimore County, Maryland] Over 160 native or naturalized tree species can be found in Maryland. Oak and hickory are the dominant hardwoods, making up 60 percent of forested areas. Loblolly pine, the predominant forest tree on the Eastern Shore, is the most prevalent softwood, composing 15% of forests.

In 2019, forests constituted 2.46 million acres (40%) of Maryland's land surface, with lumber, pulpwood, and piling being the chief forest products. Some 1.87 million acres of forests, 76% of the total, belong to private landowners, while 24% belong to the public, including the State.

White pines, Gunpowder Falls State Park, south of Bradshaw, Baltimore County, Maryland, October 2000. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.


[photo, Lumber truck, West Market St., Snow Hill, Maryland] The fifth largest industry in the State, the forest industry has a value of about $4 billion. In western Maryland, the industry is the largest employer in Allegany and Garrett counties and on the Eastern Shore, it is the second largest. In 2018, the industry generated 5,196 forestry-related jobs, with a payroll of $286 million.

Production of lumber and building materials in Fiscal Year 2019 generated $418 million, and supplied 8.52% of Maryland's overall tax receipts.

Lumber truck, West Market St., Snow Hill, Maryland, June 2018. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.


[photo, Loblolly pine forest, Assateague Island National Park Seashore (Worcester County), Maryland] Maryland's Reforestation Law requires that any forests that are cleared for State-funded highway construction projects must be replaced (Code Natural Resources Article, secs. 5-101 through 5-103). Enacted in 1991, the Maryland Forest Conservation Act ensures that forests, particularly those near water, including wetlands, on steep terrain, and within large wildlife areas are identified and protected during land development (Chapter 255, Acts of 1991; Code Natural Resources Article, secs. 5-1601 through 5-1613).

Loblolly pine forest, Assateague Island National Park Seashore (Worcester County), May 2015. Photo by Sarah A. Hanks.


Near the Chesapeake Bay and near Maryland forests, sea levels are rising at double the world's average rate. Along with climate change, forests on Maryland's Lower Eastern Shore increasingly are affected by saltwater intrusion, or the movement of saltwater towards land that occurs when too much freshwater is removed from aquifers, and the settling of the land itself. In 2018, some 41,094 acres, primarily in Dorchester County, were affected by saltwater intrusion. This is a significant increase from the 13,096 total acres affected in 2017. The General Assembly ordered the Department of Planning, along with the Departments of Agriculture, Environment, and Natural Resources, to devise a plan to adapt to saltwater intrusion and update it every five years (Chapter 628, Acts of 2018).

STATE FORESTS (by county)


Maryland has nine State forests. The
Forest Service of the Department of Natural Resources oversees them along with the Chesapeake Forest Lands, five demonstration forests, one tree nursery, and sixteen fire towers totalling 224,140 acres. Demonstration forests show short- and long-term effects of sound forest and wildlife management practices.

ALLEGANY COUNTY

CECIL COUNTY

CHARLES COUNTY

GARRETT COUNTY

HARFORD COUNTY

PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY

ST. MARY'S COUNTY

WORCESTER COUNTY

Source: Forest Service, Department of Natural Resources
Sales & Use Tax Summary Report, Comptroller of Maryland

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