Environment

What’s Happening to the Trees in New Orleans?

The Louisiana city has struggled to rebuild its tree canopy, devastated by storms and neglect. But an influx of federal aid and a new reforestation plan could offer hope. 

While huge live oak trees are a fixture of New Orleans neighborhoods like the Garden District, the city’s overall tree canopy has been in decline. 

Photo: Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images

To a casual visitor, New Orleans appears to be a city of trees. It’s home to both the largest urban wildlife refuge in the US and a city park larger than New York’s Central Park. Sprawling live oaks, some hundreds of years old, shade the city’s most famous avenues and neighborhoods; their enormous boughs, dripping with Spanish moss, are local icons.

But that picturesque image is a bit misleading.